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Chamber and committees

Abandon Plan to Increase the State Pension Age

  • Submitted by: Pauline McNeill, Glasgow, Scottish Labour.
  • Date lodged: Thursday, 23 December 2021
  • Motion reference: S6M-02665

That the Parliament notes research carried out by pension consultants LLP, which, it believes, has cast doubt on the UK Government’s timetable for extending the state pension age; understands that the research shows that the life expectancy figures, which current increases are based on, are no longer accurate and that the century-long trend of increasing life expectancy has stagnated and is now in decline, in comparison to the estimates made in 2014; further understands that the research points to fears that the long-term impact of the COVID-19 pandemic would put further pressure on life expectancy rates; believes that the new life expectancy data fatally undermines the case for extending the state pension age; considers that it would be an appalling injustice to force people to work until their late 60s, when the evidence suggests no equivalent rise in life expectancy; believes that, for many people working in physically-demanding jobs, or experiencing age-related illness, such an extension of their working life is impossible, and urges the UK Government to take this new information into account, to prioritise treating elderly people with dignity and respect, and to abandon its plans to increase the state pension age.


Supported by: Karen Adam, Colin Beattie, Sarah Boyack, Kenneth Gibson, Fiona Hyslop, Bill Kidd, Ruth Maguire, Alex Rowley, Paul Sweeney, Mercedes Villalba