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Latest News Can you afford to retire if you’re self-employed?

Can you afford to retire if you’re self-employed?

Retiring and being self employed

New research reveals the majority of the self-employed are not saving for retirement.

Source: IFS

Are you self-employed? If so, do you contribute to a private pension?

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has examined the answers to these two questions and found the likelihood of answering yes to both is much the same. Drawing on government data, the IFS calculated that in 2018:

  • 1% of the UK workforce – around 4.8 million people – were self-employed.
  • Just 16% of these self-employed people paid into a private pension.

As the graph shows, the proportion of pension contributors among the employed and self-employed workforce steadily fell from 1998 until 2012. In October 2012, pension automatic enrolment was launched and, by March 2019, over 10 million workers had signed up. Self-employed people were left out of auto-enrolment, which explains the sharp divergence between the employee and self-employed lines from 2012 onwards.

The IFS research struggled to determine why only one in six of the self-employed were saving in a private pension – two thirds less than 20 years ago. It found that the characteristics of the self-employed workforce have changed over that period, with women, older people and more part-workers making up most of the numbers. However, none of these factors were enough to explain the fall in pension contributions. Given the tax relief which pension contributions attract, one surprising discovery was that the largest decline in self-employed contributions came from the higher-income bracket and the long-term self-employed.

If you answered yes to the first question and no to the second, it may be because you are expecting the state pension to make up the largest slice of your retirement income. You’re not along in thinking this, as it is a view shared by more than a quarter of the self-employed. Currently, the state pension amounts to £175.20 a week. If that sounds like a less than comfortable retirement plan to you, perhaps you need to rethink the answer to that second question…

Read more: The rise of the ‘semi-retired’


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