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“Cradle to Grave” No More, The Quiet Death of State Pensions for a New Generation

“Cradle to Grave” No More, The Quiet Death of State Pensions for a New Generation
“Cradle to Grave” No More, The Quiet Death of State Pensions for a New Generation

By D Collins

As Ireland approaches the rollout of sweeping pension changes in 2025, a seismic but under-reported shift is underway: the State is slowly dismantling the “cradle to grave” social contract that defined public life for decades.

In its place is a colder, market-driven model one that subtly rewrites the deal between the Irish government and its citizens.

Where once there was a promise of dignity in old age, now there is fine print, contribution caps, and auto-enrolment schemes managed by investment markets. And beneath the polished brochures lies a troubling truth: young workers today may never see a real State pension at all.

Article 45 — A Promise with No Teeth
Buried in the Constitution’s Article 45 is a noble but unenforceable aspiration:

“The State pledges itself to safeguard with especial care the economic interests of the aged.”

That principle shaped generations of policy unemployment assistance, social housing, and most notably, the old age pension. It gave working people an expectation that their loyalty, taxes, and service would one day be rewarded with security and respect in retirement.

But in 2025, the State begins walking away from that moral obligation. These new pension reforms mark not just a change in how we save but a retreat by the government from its foundational responsibility
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The Fine Print of the New Pension Era
The 2024 Finance Bill and the postponed “My Future Fund” auto enrolment scheme introduce a slick new system but with it, accountability for retirement shifts decisively away from the State and onto the individual.

Key Changes

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