The Shocking Truth Behind Why No Age Pensioners Could Rewrite Your Retirement Playbook Forever

The Shocking Truth Behind Why No Age Pensioners Could Rewrite Your Retirement Playbook Forever

Ever wonder why Generation Z looks at the state pension with the same skepticism you might reserve for a two-dollar bill? A few years back, my co-blogger The Accumulator painted a rather rosy political picture — governments playing a high-stakes game of spin, dodging crises, and apparently safeguarding our pensions like a treasured secret. Fast forward to today, and the scene’s changed — or has it? While older generations bicker over triple-locks and pension reforms, Gen Z is quietly questioning if those promises will mean a dime for them when the time comes. It’s more than just doubt; it’s a simmering existential question about their financial future in an era marked by political chaos, shifting retirement ages, and even crypto dreams standing in for traditional pensions. As someone who’s weathered the storms of market shifts and algorithm swings, I find this generational gulf fascinating—what happens when the very “political nutshell” frays? Dive into this deep exploration of pensions, politics, and the cultural clash over our financial safety nets. LEARN MORE

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A few years ago, my co-blogger The Accumulator argued that fears for the future of the state pension were overblown, writing:

Governments stay in power by racking up achievement points with their supporters, neglecting those they cannot court, winning the spin wars, avoiding catastrophe, appearing more credible than the opposition, and kicking the really toxic cans down the road.

Your pension is protected by that political nutshell.

Perhaps it’s because they’ve grown up in an era of almost continual political upheaval, but Gen Z is not so sure. When you’ve seen your birthrights and much of your prosperity chucked overboard for a handful of famously hard-to-find magic beans, watched six UK prime ministers fall in a decade, and witnessed a cage fight held on the lawn of the White House, your political nutshells no doubt crack different.

In his early 20s, Joel tells the BBC this week that:

“I don’t believe that I’ll be a recipient of a state pension. I know a lot of people my age don’t think they’re going to be… There just won’t be enough money.”

Meanwhile 27-year old Conor rightly noted that “the goal posts keep moving”, adding:

“At the minute I’ll be 68 by the time I can retire, but I do think I’ll be probably closer to 75, if I’m honest.”

The BBC article is an unusually deep dive into how state pensions are seen by those still half a century from – potentially – receiving them.

Never mind the bollocks

We hear far more often from older generations about pensions – typically in uproar when, for instance, the sustainability of the triple-lock on state pensions is even questioned.

Meanwhile Gen Z quietly suspects that it will have to foot the bill.

It’s easy to scoff when a 20-something says they’ll invest in crypto instead of a workplace pension. But there’s a sort of everyday nihilism revealed here, too.

I’m from Generation X, the famously fatalistic mini-generation of slackers that (at the margin) worked McJobs – at least until the 1990s tech boom got going and we too got religion about capitalism.

Until then, those of us who thought about it suspected we’d be left behind.

But looking back – not least from the other side of a two-decade long house price boom that took homes from a doable three-times income to a bonkers ten-times-plus – our economic concerns seem modest.

And at least the doomed youth of the late 1970s had the Sex Pistols making headlines for them.

Gen Z turns to ChatGPT for comfort. And we all know it’s coming for their jobs, too.

Have a great weekend.

From Monevator

Help! My passive fund is aggressively tech focussed – Monevator

The Living Is Yield-y model portfolio: one year update – Monevator [Moguls]

From the archive-ator: Can dogs and FIRE go together? – Monevator

News

Britons see sharpest drop in wealth of any developed nation since pandemic – T.I.M.

Halifax brand to be scrapped after 173 years – BBC

Interest rate cut ‘off the table for now’ says BOE’s Bailey – This Is Money

‘Sh*tloads to come’: London takeover spree set to accelerate – City AM

Three in five homes listed in January have failed to sell… – This Is Money

…as UK house prices stall for second straight month – Guardian

How scam refund rules are reducing fraud – Which

Motorists face further delays to £9.1bn car finance refunds – This Is Money

NHS to reward people who walk 30 minutes a day – BBC

Hedge funds BlueCrest loses £200m tax battle with HMRC – Reuters

Bubbles or regime-shifting in gold and Bitcoin? [Log scale]Econbrowser

Products and services

Disclosure: Links to platforms may be affiliate links, where we may earn a commission. This article is not personal financial advice. When investing, your capital is at risk and you may get back less than invested. With commission-free brokers other fees may apply. See terms and fees. Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results.

Hargreaves Lansdown launches table-topping 4.5% cash ISA – This Is Money

The cheapest ways to get Wimbledon tickets – Be Clever With Your Cash

Get up to £1,500 cashback when you transfer your cash and/or investments to Charles Stanley Direct through this affiliate link. Terms apply – Charles Stanley

Co-Op Bank slashes fees on spending abroad – This Is Money

Santander switch offer: £180 and a £45 Amazon gift card – B.C.W.Y.C.

The cheapest mortgage lenders in June – Which

Get up to £200 cashback when you open an Interactive Investor SIPP. Terms and fees apply, affiliate link – Interactive Investor

Chip shortages set to push up prices for electronic devices – This Is Money

Does marriage affect your home insurance bill? – Which

Homes for sale with kitchens that open on to gardens, in pictures – Guardian

Comment and opinion

Should a fund manager invest their own money differently? – Behavioural Investment

“We had packed lunches every day for 10 years and retired at 40”BBC

Chauffeur knowledge – A Wealth of Common Sense

The ins and outs of withdrawing a pension early – Be Clever With Your Cash

The cost of status – Young Money

Alternatives in a portfolio: Role, risk, and realism explained – Vanguard

Retirees need a plan ahead of a potential lost decade – Morningstar

Is $5m in Treasury bills enough to be set for life? – Of Dollars and Data

A dirty dozen – Quietly Saving

Managed futures ‘crisis alpha’ is compelling – Tax Alpha Insider

Wall Street is becoming crypto – All Star Charts

Another AI maybe-bubble mini-special

Yes, this market is all about AI stocks… – Morningstar

…and what history tells us about the AI boom – FA Mag

Scottish Mortgage: Tech run can continue with ‘unreasonable prices’ – Trustnet

Naughty corner: Active antics

Don’t quit drinking, don’t quit value investing – Lee Roach via X

When information is no longer the edge – Enterprising Investor

The case for value over growth is building – Apollo

When PE firms borrow to fund ‘skin in the game’ – PitchBook

Social media causes coincident bubbles across different assets [Research]SSRN

Embracing business failure mini-special

Failure as a competitive advantage – Investment Masterclass

Winning a game of failure – Vixology

Kindle book bargains

The Trading Game by Gary Stevenson – £0.99 on Kindle

Alchemy by Rory Sutherland – £0.99 on Kindle

What’s Your Dream? by Simon Squibb – £0.99 on Kindle

How to Have an Epic Retirement by Bec Wilson – £0.99 on Kindle

Or pick up one of the all-time great investing classics – Monevator shop

Environmental factors

Are crows really our friends? – Audubon

The corals that shouldn’t exist – Biographic

Lundy Island seabird population soars after rat removal – Independent

Robot overlord roundup

We need a way to prove personhood online – Noema

Ford rehires human engineers after AI fails to match quality checks – BBC

Meta joins SpaceX in selling spare compute – Semafor

AI slop is starting to overwhelm engagement platforms – Bloomberg via MSN

Not everyone is happy to see delivery robots in the UK – BBC

Stiffed twice by the AI bubble – Simple Living in Suffolk

Gen AI creates delicious, sustainable, and nutritious burgers [Research]Nature

Heavy AI adoption linked to more hiring, new study shows – Big Technology

Not at the dinner table

New ‘No 10 North’ plan will rebalance power in Britain, says Andy Burnham – BBC

Burnham also promises to ease cost of living pressures – Guardian

The wheels are coming off Putin’s war – The Bulwark

Trump’s financial disclosures reveal $1.4 billion in crypto earnings… – NBC

…but the White House sees no conflict of interest – Citation Needed

Florida is executing prisoners at a record pace – ProPublica

Off our beat

The surprising power of simple predictions – Tim Harford

Rips, a ghastly new digital Pokémon gambling game [Clue is in the name?]Wired

How Amsterdam invented the fire department – Works in Progress

A beginner’s guide to cooking with beans – Guardian

Why Scotland is no longer ‘the murder capital of Europe’ – BBC

A super yacht armada left a marine graveyard in Miami – Bloomberg via MSN

Communion by JD Vance review: a strange, poignant book – Guardian

Couple turn mid-terrace garden into a tropical jungle with poisonous plants – BBC

And finally…

“As you gain more wealth, money solves fewer and fewer of your problems.”
– Nick Maggiulli, The Wealth Ladder

Note this article includes affiliate links, such as from Amazon and Interactive Investor.

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