http://frozenbritishpensions.org/
Hi Sandi
The above website also has a detailed 2020 report on the topic.
Mike
450,000 British pensioners, 3.5% of all recipients of the
State Pension and half the pensioners living overseas, are currently
adversely affected by the Government’s ‘frozen’ pensions policy.
This means that rather than the annual uprating received by UK
pensioners, their pension is frozen at the level first received for the
rest of their life abroad. In practice, this means that their state
pension decreases in real terms year-on-year.
- To give an example, a pensioner aged 90 who has lived in a frozen
country for all of their retirement would now still get a state pension
of just £64.70 per week. If they had lived in the UK, they would
currently receive £156.20.
- As a further example, a pensioner aged 72 who became pensionable in a
frozen country in 2016 would receive a state pension of £119.30 per
week. This is in stark contrast to the £203.85 they would be receiving
in the UK under the new state pension.
More than 90% of the ‘frozen’ pensioners live in Commonwealth countries,
many in Australia, Canada, South Africa and New Zealand, but also
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, many Caribbean islands and all African
countries. The countries where the pension is increased each year
include the USA, all EU countries, Barbados, Bermuda, Israel, Jamaica,
Mauritius, the Philippines.
The APPG on Frozen British Pensions believe that the current policy is unjust. This has several dimensions:
- The contributory nature of that State Pension, and
therefore the injustice of the current situation for pensioners who have
made NI contributions in anticipation of a state pension in their
retirement, but for whom entitlement is so varied.
- The unequal application of the frozen pension policy due to increasingly anachronistic bilateral arrangements with some countries and not others.
- The financial and social impact on those who moved abroad historically,
who have seen their real terms income fall year on year. This causes
loss of independence, increasing dependency on families and in some
cases forces people to return to the UK to live alone.
- The barrier to emigration impact of frozen pensions
on those approaching retirement in the UK. This is increasingly
impacting ethnic minority communities with cultural links to the
Commonwealth, adding a further layer of discrimination.