Mineworkers’ pensions
Covers the arrangements made for mineworkers' pensions (MPS) and British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme (BCSSS) following privatisation of British Coal in 1994.
This note provides a brief overview of the introduction of the first state pensions and subsequent developments
Old Age Pensions Act 1908 (125 KB , PDF)
The Old Age Pensions Act 1908 provided for the first UK state pensions, financed out of central taxation. The pension was 5 shillings a week. It was means-tested, with the full amount paid to those with incomes below £21 a year and reduced on a sliding scale for those with incomes between £21 and £31 and ten shillings. Initially, people needed to have been resident in the United Kingdom for 20 years and there were behavioural tests. For example, people could be disqualified if they had made themselves poor in order to qualify, had been imprisoned or convicted under the Inebriates Act.
This note provides a brief overview of the background to the introduction of the first state pensions, the basic rules of the original scheme and some of the subsequent developments. The Annex suggests more detailed sources of information for further reading.
Old Age Pensions Act 1908 (125 KB , PDF)
Covers the arrangements made for mineworkers' pensions (MPS) and British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme (BCSSS) following privatisation of British Coal in 1994.
The government's pensions investment review is seeking to increase investment by pension schemes. Here we look at the policy debate on how defined contribution pension schemes invest.
This briefing gives an overview of pensions in the UK, including key data on the new and old state pension and private (occupational and personal) pensions