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Wednesday 26 October 2016 11:50 am

The government’s pension freedoms were less popular last quarter as withdrawals fell

By: Oliver Gill

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Retirees have taken £7.6bn from their savings since reforms were introduced in April 2015, the Treasury revealed today – but the pace of withdrawals is falling.

The amount withdrawn during the third quarter of 2016 dipped to £1.5bn, down from £1.8bn in the previous three months.

One of George Osborne's flagship pension reforms announced just over 18 months ago was to allow a tax-free lump sum to be withdrawn of up to 25 per cent of savings. At the time, there were fears pensioners would go on a spending spree, leaving them with insufficient cash to fund the rest of their retirement.

Read more: Pension reform fraud worse than previously thought

However, the latest statistics indicate the amount being taken out per person is steadily falling.

Economic secretary to the Treasury, Simon Kirby said:

Today’s figures prove that allowing people to do what they with their hard-earned savings, whether it’s buying an annuity or taking a cash lump sum, is the right thing to do.

The freedoms remain a popular choice as people consider the different ways to fund their retirement.

Read more: Have we been tempted to raid our pension pots?

Tom Selby, a senior analyst at AJ Bell explained that the reduction in the individual pay-outs was positive.​ He said: "The initial dash for cash has tailed off and people are becoming more realistic about a sensible withdrawal level over time."

However there remains a concern among some experts around the proportion of savings that people are withdrawing in one-fell-swoop. Old Mutual's head of retirement planning Adrian Walker said:

While this is only a high-level overview, it implies the average withdrawal is a large sum in excess of £10,000. This suggests some people may be at risk of exhausting their pension savings too quickly which will have a longer term detrimental impact on future retirement income.

 

 

 

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