Commenting on a National Audit Office report about the
Government’s reforms to public service pensions, published today,
Kevin Courtney, Joint General Secretary of the National Education
Union, said:
"The NEU broadly welcomes the NAO report on public service
pensions, which largely endorses the NEU’s arguments down the
years. If we as a nation want decent public services then we must
be prepared to pay decent pensions to public servants. It is
clear that the Government’s cuts to public service schemes have
gone too far.
"Public service pensions have always been affordable. As the NAO
makes clear, the vast majority of the increase in the amount paid
is due to the increase in the number of public service
pensioners, which is a known demographic consequence of the baby
boomer generation reaching retirement. The average pension paid
in the Teachers’ Pension Scheme has actually fallen since
1999/2000 from £13,679 to £12,337 today.
"The correct way of looking at public service pension costs is as
a percentage of GDP. Public service pensions are affordable now
at around 2% of GDP, but are due to fall to 1.5% of GDP by
2064/65. There is no justification for further politically
motivated attacks on public service pensions.
"In all schemes men receive higher pensions than women. Wider
inequalities in the workplace feed into pension schemes, through
longer average service for men and higher salaries. The pensions
gap is lower in the Teachers’ Pension Scheme (29%) than in the
NHS and Civil Service Schemes, but it is still too high. We call
on the Government to work on reducing the gender pensions gap."