Gordon Gekko
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Hi
I'm doing some pension planning at the moment and I've come across something pretty alarming.
In order to get a full State Pension, you need a total of at least 520 PRSI contributions and an average of 48 contributions per year. The former represents 10 years of work which isn't onerous at all. However the latter could be very problematic. It's the average from when you first worked until you retire. I had a summer job when I was 16. Then I wasn't in employment while I did my Leaving Cert and while I was in college. I've worked consistently since then, but if I work to retirement age (assume 70 for the purposes of this discussion) I can't get a full pension.
Age 16 - One year with circa 12 contributions
Age 17 to 22 - Six years with no contributions
Age 23 to 70 - 48 years with 52 contributions
My average, despite my 48 years of graft and payment of 4% PRSI on what will hopefully be decent numbers, will not entitle me to a full State Pension.
That simply isn't fair - It's "only" a reduction of €5 a week based on current rules, but it's ridiculous.
I'm doing some pension planning at the moment and I've come across something pretty alarming.
In order to get a full State Pension, you need a total of at least 520 PRSI contributions and an average of 48 contributions per year. The former represents 10 years of work which isn't onerous at all. However the latter could be very problematic. It's the average from when you first worked until you retire. I had a summer job when I was 16. Then I wasn't in employment while I did my Leaving Cert and while I was in college. I've worked consistently since then, but if I work to retirement age (assume 70 for the purposes of this discussion) I can't get a full pension.
Age 16 - One year with circa 12 contributions
Age 17 to 22 - Six years with no contributions
Age 23 to 70 - 48 years with 52 contributions
My average, despite my 48 years of graft and payment of 4% PRSI on what will hopefully be decent numbers, will not entitle me to a full State Pension.
That simply isn't fair - It's "only" a reduction of €5 a week based on current rules, but it's ridiculous.