Flying Dodo
It'll soon be summer
Policy Exchange made the case for reform, however, saying that the annual cost of taxpayer contributions to police pensions has doubled, rising from £951m in 1995/96 to £1.9bn in 2009/10
Policy Exchange believe that members who joined before 2006 receive benefits worth about 35 per cent of their annual salary, paid for by the taxpayer.
The maximum pension is now half of final salary, plus a lump sum of four times final salary. The new minimum retirement age is 55.
My question to the pension experts out there how much would be needed in the pot to pay this out?
The Police Pension Scheme, like most public service schemes, is a pay as you go scheme whereby current pensioners are paid out of the incoming contributions and general Government coffers, so it doesn't build up a fund to cover current and future liabilities. So all you can do is compare what an individual would have to have built up to secure an equivalent pension. Which of course depends upon what final salary and years of service you want to assume for a police officer. However, assuming a final salary of £36,000, under the current scheme, that means a maximum pension of £18,000 pa
For a 55 year old to retire now on an RPI linked pension starting at £18,000 pa, plus an allowance for a 50% dependent's pension would require a fund of around £900,000. But that figure is academic, as the Government isn't having to pay out £900,000, either now or over the lifetime of a retired copper.