torblednam
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How?
Existing employees
2) The benefits accrued by existing workers would be given a present value and this would be added to their Defined Contribution pot
One of the big advantages of switching to a Defined Contribution system, is that the true cost of employing public servants would be clear and transparent. We should not be deferring these costs.
We would immediately recognise that we have a huge deficit in the public sector pension scheme. This would be good to recognise as it would show by just how much we are living beyond our means.
It would have a cash flow implication for future contributions. The existing ones would have a transfer value but it would be subject to a hair cut as we could not afford it.
Brendan
I'm referring to this:
Or maybe I've misunderstood something? It appears Brendan intends to value the benefits accrued through the DB scheme, to arrive at a transfer value across to the DC scheme, and apply a (quite vague) haircut to it on its way over...
Existing employees
2) The benefits accrued by existing workers would be given a present value and this would be added to their Defined Contribution pot
I wonder how the likes of Eoghan Murphy, Simon Harris, Brendan Griffin and Helen McEntee feel about all this - presumably they'll still be doing the rounds when the chickens come home to roost? All current Ministers (two Ministers of State) and carrying significant portfolios. There must be FF young guns waiting in the wings too, no?Hello,
For all the logic there is in this submission, there is absolutely no way in hell the politicians will grasp this nettle and why should they, when they can simply ignore the problem and leave it for others to deal with in years to come... and that's before we move on to discussing them possibly doing something that would negatively impact on their own future income.
Brendan are you in favour of having the state pension as a defined contribution scheme too? The fact that people can qualify for this having made just 10 years A rate PRSI contributions is rather generous don't you think!
So you should get the Contributory pension and a defined contribution pension.
I think that the fairest approach would be to shut down the DB piece and preserve the accrued benefit.
Then just kick off the DC from today.
Basically what happened in BOI and AIB etc.
I think this is a very important point that torblednam makes. An awful lot of public/civil servants (lower-medium paid) contribute to a pension for up to 40 years and actually come away with very little when the OAP is deducted.Thanks for your magnanimity, but I already get a contributory pension as part of the current DB scheme as an A class payer; it's subsumed into my pension payment. The value of my DB pension (before you tear up my T&C's), properly stated, is 50% final salary minus whatever the contributory pension is when I retire.
For the very large number of lower grade staff who earn less than 50k, and therefore would be in line for a pension of 20k - 25k, the excess based on the current state pension is about 8k - 12k p.a..
It's actually better than that - you can retire on full pension after 40 years if the Bank agrees & such agreement is usually forthcoming as I only know a handful of people in BOI aged over 55 & then in due course the OAP kicks in if you attain the appropriate age.Wow, so if you did 45 years in BoI and finished on a salary of say 60k...you got a pension of 40k + the OAP of 12k.
Thats some deal
Is the position that someone on €24k a year for 40 years effectively gets no pension?
i.e. because their 50% is simply the State Pension
They obviously get their €36k lump sum, but that's hardly being in clover.
The myth of the Public Service Rolls Royce pension for lower grade workers is well and truly debunked!Yes, the 12 k CSP is deemed to cover 50% of salary, so no occupational pension paid.
An awful lot of public/civil servants (lower-medium paid) contribute to a pension for up to 40 years and actually come away with very little when the OAP is deducted.
Does anyone work for 40 years and end up on a final salary of €24,000?Is the position that someone on €24k a year for 40 years effectively gets no pension?
Wow, now I know why my charges are so high.It's actually better than that - you can retire on full pension after 40 years if the Bank agrees & such agreement is usually forthcoming as I only know a handful of people in BOI aged over 55 & then in due course the OAP kicks in if you attain the appropriate age.
Probably not unless they are working part time/job sharing etc.Does anyone work for 40 years and end up on a final salary of €24,000?
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