
Only one in three people expect to stop working completely when they retire and phased retirement will become the new norm, according to a consumer study for Aegon which also shows that few people have a formal financial plan for retirement.
People will have more choices about how they take their income, says Aegon, but the decisions they face about how best to do this will potentially be more complicated, says Aegon. For that reason it is concerned that just 12 per cent of people have a financial plan for retirement written down while 39 per cent of people don't have any plan.
Retirement used to be defined by an end to working life, but today it is more likely to mark the start of a more flexible working arrangement. Just 29 per cent of UK workers believe that when they come to retire they will stop working altogether, according to Aegon's third Retirement Readiness Survey.
The survey, based on interviews with 16,000 people in 15 countries, found that 36 per cent of people in the UK anticipate they will continue to work for a while part time or on temporary contracts while a further 14% hope to continue working in some capacity throughout retirement.
In contrast, Western European workers are more likely to view retirement as an end to working life. In the Netherlands for example 33 per cent of people expect to stop working when they retire, while the figures for Sweden (36 per cent), France (51 per cent) and Spain (52 per cent) were notably higher.
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David Macmillan, managing director at Aegon UK said: "The Government's decision to provide greater pensions flexibility sits well with the plans of many workers who see retirement not as the day they stop working, but the point at which they scale back their hours. Many of these people are likely to start drawing some income from their pension in order to supplement their part time earnings.