www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1jeyn3yxn9o
This could be why governments of whatever stripe find it hard to manage the economy.
DWP’s own commissioned surveys showed that by 2007, just three years before the change, 57% of women were not aware of their altered SP age.
That isn’t the "vast majority knew" even for the most arithmetically-challenged Minister. And at the risk of labouring the point, being aware of a general change isn't the same as knowing how something affects the individual. When the changes meant that some women waited a month and some six years for their pension, how could it?
The amount the Tories under Duncan Smith saved by accelerating the changes brought about by the Pensions Act 2011 is about the same amount of excess funds sitting in the National Insuarance Fund. That's our NIC being used to service government debt and earning over £4 billion a year. That money could easily be used to pay a blanket sum of compensation as a goodwill gesture. £500 would cost just £1.9 billion. £1,000 would cost £3.8 billion.
It wouldn’t satisfy everyone and wouldn't be entirely fair but it would be in approximate line with Level 3 justice. Anyone thinking they fall within Level 4 or higher (and it can’t be that many) would have to make a special case.
The positive PR for a Labour mea culpa - settling something they were largely responsible for and the Tories refused to do - would be huge and go a long way towards repairing the damage done by the WFP debacle.
Burnhams likely economic policies if he becomes PM



