It is not so much the proposed amount that is the subject of the spin (although the proof of the pudding will be in the eating). It is more the fact that those of pensionable age who currently receive benefits (because they have made insufficient contributions to receive a pension) will in future be in receipt of a pension – the same pension as those who have contributed for theirs for many years by way of NI contributions.
Already many people who have made for than thirty years worth of NI payments have seen their payments beyond thirty years wasted (the minimum contributions for a full pension was recently reduced from 44/39 years to 30). Now it seems they will learn that they need not have contributed at all!
The Coalition government (which seems to be dominated on such matters by the LibDems) should come clean and just say that there will be no more State pension scheme, workers need not contribute (and see their NI payments reduced accordingly) and everybody will just get a nice £7k p.a. from the taxpayer when they reach State pension age.
The argument for doing this is to remove the need for a means test. A pension should not be means tested anyway, it should be simply related to contributions made. Other payments courtesy of the taxpayer should continue to be termed benefits and they should be subject to greater scrutiny, not less.