Coming up to the end of my second year in a junior public sector job, and interviewing for other positions. I'm sure I want to move on, but I know the vesting period for the single scheme is two years and I should be able to arrange my leaving date to be either side of that if I want. At the moment leaning towards getting a refund of contributions, but conscious that I don't know much about pensions.
Was disappointed to find out, a few months into this job, that there are no employer contributions. Relatives in the UK have told me how all pensions there get an employer contribution by law, and I was surprised to find that isn't the case here.
I can see my retirement account in the HR portal, and the balance matches the deductions from my salary. If that's the size of it, there are no bonuses and I'm only shifting the consumption of my own money with no chances of growing it, sounds like a terrible deal. Taking the same 20% tax hit on this money as on my regular salary and putting it towards a house deposit seems better than waiting for a tiny pension, which I can't choose the investments for and won't be able to take the whole thing as a lump sum when I'm old.
Is there some big advantage to leaving the money in though, that I've completely missed?
Was disappointed to find out, a few months into this job, that there are no employer contributions. Relatives in the UK have told me how all pensions there get an employer contribution by law, and I was surprised to find that isn't the case here.
I can see my retirement account in the HR portal, and the balance matches the deductions from my salary. If that's the size of it, there are no bonuses and I'm only shifting the consumption of my own money with no chances of growing it, sounds like a terrible deal. Taking the same 20% tax hit on this money as on my regular salary and putting it towards a house deposit seems better than waiting for a tiny pension, which I can't choose the investments for and won't be able to take the whole thing as a lump sum when I'm old.
Is there some big advantage to leaving the money in though, that I've completely missed?
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