This week we want to know if it was right to introduce Freedom and Choice and how likely it is tax relief will be cut in the November Budget.
The state pension age (SPA) could stick at 67 if the government redirects finances from boosted gross domestic product (GDP) arising from the advance of robots and artificial intelligence (AI).
This week's top stories include experts warning that trustees must act now on common and conditional data as the deadline approaches and calls for partial transfers DB transfers to be a right. Here are the top five.
Experts have called on the government to clarify the relationship between state pension age increases and the age from when individuals can flexibly access their pension pots.
Movements to equalise the state pension age (SPA) between men and women have led to more than £5bn of extra money for the government, latest analysis reveals.
Most respondents believe raising it to 68 earlier than planned is good for the economy
Plans to raise the state pension age (SPA) to 68 seven years ahead of schedule by 2039 has been welcomed by the industry as a necessary move to reflect rising life expectancy and keep costs affordable.
In line with Cridland report
The new work and pensions minister David Gauke has laid into past governments who "tinkered around the edges" with pensions policy.
A "period of stability" for the state pension age is needed and so the government should postpone any increase decision, the union Prospect has said.