by Tyler Durden
For all our UK readers, who hope some day to collect pension benefits, we
have two messages: i) our condolences, and ii) you won't. Why? The
answer comes straight from the ONS:
The new supplementary table published by ONS in Levy (2012)10 includes the
following headline figures for Government pension obligations as at end
December 2010:
- Social security pension
schemes (i.e. unfunded state pension scheme obligations): £3.843 trillion,
being 263 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) (£3.497 trillion at end
of December 2009)
- Centrally – administered
unfunded pension schemes for public sector employees (i.e. unfunded public
service pension scheme obligations): £852 billion, being 58 per cent of
GDP (£915 billion at end of December 2009)
- Funded DB pension schemes
for which government is responsible: £313 billion, being 21 per cent of
GDP (£332 billion at end of December 2009).
In summary, the estimates in the new supplementary table indicate a
total Government pension obligation, at the end of December 2010, of £5.01
trillion, or 342 per cent of GDP, of which around £4.7 trillion relates to
unfunded obligations.
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