TheFamousGrouse
Registered Shopper
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2024
- Messages
- 154
Older pensioners, the majority of whom started work several years in age before today's youngsters, were led to believe that their NI contributions would fund their old age pensions when the time came. It's clear now that those contributions were not ring-fenced for their alleged purpose. The pension has morphed into a "benefit", financed by the current workforce.The problem is for older pensioners who are receiving the lower state pension . The cut-off date was for men born before 6th April 1951 and women born before 6th April 1953. There is about a £40 a week difference between full state pensions paid to people now aged 71 to 74. £40 a week less each week means those on the borderline, even if they are lucky enough to be receiving a paltry private pension, really need that extra money to make life bearable. They have worked for it. They deserve it.
Poor, often frail and vulnerable, older people are being used to divert money to the less deserving.
The me, me, me generation would do well to ponder this because it is age and gender discrimination at its basest. And our own caring government has seen fit to introduce it.
I've long advocated that George Orwell's book "Animal Farm" should be on every school curriculum.