It’s a new policy idea that is still at an early stage, devised by Andrew Lewin and being developed independently by the Social Market Foundation.
The proposal: If you have made at least 10 years of National Insurance contributions, the state will give you the choice to access one year of your state pension a year early.
This is not free money. Your choice would be to delay your state retirement age for a year and in exchange, receive the lump sum.
For most people reading this, that would mean putting the age at which you can claim your state pension back from 68 to 69.
No, that isn’t the proposal as it stands. We trust people who have worked for 10 years (so will be at least 28 years old) to make an informed choice about this. More work on this is happening now.
We’re modelling this as an option. Perhaps you take the money aged 32, start paying at back aged 40 in monthly instalments (like a student loan) and if you pay it all back, you can access your state pension at age 68 again. More on this to come.
We’re working on this. We want the Citizens Advance to be a policy that is net neutral for the Treasury over the long-term, but it would involve money being brought forward, so this all has to be modelled carefully. That work is underway.