New research out this morning finds that one-in-three working age families and almost half of low-income families  don’t have basic level ‘rainy day’ savings of at least £1,000.

The report Precautionary Tales from Resolution Foundation part of a partnership with the Financial Fairness Trust examines the state of saving across Britain, and what can be done to improve it.

This was exposed during the cost of living crisis, as families with low savings were more than twice as likely to have used credit cards, overdrafts, or borrowed money from formal lenders in order to meet daily expenses compared to those with more than £1,000 of savings.

However, while modest savings of £1,000 can help with unexpected costs such as broken fridges and car repairs, larger savings are needed to cope with bigger life events such as unemployment or family breakdown. The report notes that far too few families have these larger savings either – less than half of working age families have savings worth at least three months of income.

As a result, Britain has a £74 billion savings shortfall versus a country in which every working age family has at least three month’s income in precautionary savings.

More encouragingly, pension coverage has been transformed over the past decade, with auto-enrolment increasing the share of people saving into a pension from 47 per cent in 2012, to 79 per cent in 2021.

However, too many are still not saving enough for an adequate income in retirement. Around two-in-five working age people (13 million in total) are currently not saving enough to meet the minimum target for an adequate retirement income (at least two-thirds of their pre-retirement income).

The Foundation says that confronting this triple savings challenge is particularly daunting as there are trade-offs over which kind of saving to prioritise. Recent research shows that additional pension contributions are not only funded out of lower consumption, but also lower savings and, in some cases, higher debt.

However, all three savings challenges can be met by learning from policy successes at home – the opt-out approach of auto-enrolment – and abroad.

The report calls for auto-enrolment contributions to be gradually increased from 8 to 12 per cent, with employer and employee contributions matched at 6 per cent each.

These 12 per cent contributions should include a 2 per cent contribution into an easy access ‘sidecar savings’ scheme of up to £1,000, with contributions above this level going into a pension pot. This would revolutionise the number of families with ‘rainy day’ savings in the same way that auto-enrolment has transformed pension saving, while also boosting people’s retirement incomes.

Making the UK’s highly inflexible pension pots more accessible during people’s working lives will also help them to cope with bigger life events or difficult circumstances. Currently, it is not possible to draw down any of your pension before the age of 55 (rising to 57 by 2028) without incurring a significant penalty, except in cases of terminal illness.

The report proposes allowing savers to borrow the lesser of £15,000 or 20 per cent of the value of their pension pots. These loans would be paid back via higher contributions directly into their pension pot at a later stage. Enabling early, restricted, and repayable, access to pensions can help families deal with pre-retirement financial challenges, say the authors.

This more flexible approach already works well in the US, where around one-in-five participants in 401(k) plans have a loan against their pension at any one time, and around 90 per cent of these loans are repaid to their own funds in full and with interest.

Molly Broome, Economist at the Resolution Foundation, said:

“Families across Britain face a triple savings challenge – not saving enough for rainy days, bigger life events, or for a decent income in retirement.

“One-in-three families in the country have less than £1,000 in savings – which left many people exposed during the cost of living crisis – while around 13 million individuals aren’t saving enough for an adequate income in retirement.

“We can address all three challenges by building on the success of pensions auto-enrolment to opt more people into both easy access and long-term saving.

“We should also offer people more flexibility over their pension pots, as other countries do, in order to help them with difficult circumstances. These reforms will improve families’ financial resilience during their working lives and into retirement too.”

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