Retirement Planner's round up of the top pensions stories of the week.
Long-term care funding has a lot to learn from "how the pensions debate has moved on", says Association of British Insurers director of general insurance and health, Nick Starling.
LORD TURNER is conducting a last-minute charm offensive on employers and insurers, just a week before his Pensions Commission releases its report on the solution to Britain's pensions crisis, according to the Times.
A MORE generous state pension in return for a longer working life will be among the chief recommendations made by Lord Adair Turner's Pension Commission later this month, according to the Financial Times .
Sir Malcolm Rifkind, shadow work and pensions secretary, is launching a new Bill this week designed to simplify the pensions system and encourage people to save for their retirement.
Professor John Hills, serving on the team of the Adair Turner Pensions Commission, has opened the lid on its concerns over a lack of understanding of the pension system, ahead of the much-anticipated report due to be released in the Autumn.
Comments by the head of the government's pensions commission to a Sunday paper may have shaken the foundation on which the government has pinned its hopes to solving the UK pension crisis, albeit gently.
As many as 10 million immigrants may be needed in the UK by 2025 to prevent a pension crisis, new research reveals.
The Pensions Commission says it wants to "stimulate debate" through its document, which also contains a hefty set of references to consultations over the next year.
Analysis of the arguments for and against compulsion will be a key area for the Pensions Commission to consider between now and the publication of its second report in autumn 2005.