Good Morning Late Wednesday Birds.
ChatterBank2 mins ago
Senior citizen 'A', receiving state pension plus pension credit, is entitled to WFA, plus access to help with housing costs and council tax.
Senior citizen 'B', receiving state pension plus a private pension (which is equivalent to pension credit) is not entitled to any state help.
Both are receiving the same income, but because one had the foresight to have a company pension, that person is now excluded from any state benefits.
Have I missed something? I'm sure the knowledgeable users of AB will point it out if I have. TIA.
No best answer has yet been selected by 10ClarionSt. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Even worse, Person B's income is £2.50 a week above the limit so receives no pension credit and all the add one. On average £3k a year worse off than Person A.
Makes me very angry. I know several people in that situation.
Another kick in the teeth is Person C lives in Spain in receipt of UK state pension plus huge private and occupational pensions. Owns a big villa and three properties he rents out, one in the UK and two in Spain. He gets the WFA. I know him, too.
It's not a good system but doubt anyone will be able to unpick it- there will always be losers and howls of protests... although Labour will never get a better chance and have more chance of pushing through than the 'heartless Tories'.
Yes anyone who had saved a pension pot of around £30000 has wasted their time if any income will prevent them getting PC
The problem is that benfits are introduced to fix a problem and then people start to abuse them. A century ago men were knackered at 70, couldn't work, hadn't ever earned enough to save so ended up destitute. Pension baled them out with a pittance to keep them going. Now most people but not all earn enough to save for retirement; some do, some don't. You can easily identify the ones who have enough money to not need help but how do you differentiate between those who don't into "didn't save" and "couldn't save" classes to decide who needs help?
Well I wish I hadn't bothered to save for a smallish private pension now. We're just about in the position you describe in the O.P., perhaps a couple of thousand more - but I have to keep the house at 22C because OH is nearly 92 with heart problems - also I have breathing problems needing the air fo be reasonably warm (cold brings on asthma).
We'll cope - because we have savings, but there will be people who don't.
No, it's not equitable, but it's always been like that. When I was hand-washing nappies, sheets etc. and heard other young mums saying things like they were going to get 'the Social' to provide a new washing machine - I nearly cried.
BARRY, "Jourdain, shame you didn't move to Spain. The warmer climate might have helped and you would still get the WFA. Bonkers, isn't it?"
It would be bonkers if that were true but it isn't and the Winter Fuel Payment hasn't been payable to those living in Spain and several other European countries since 2015, due to their higher average temperatures.