I'm a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Defence and have policy responsibility for service pensions, no-fault compensation, and wider veterans policy. I'll go on to explain what each of those parts means.
I work for part of the organization that's headed up by a three-star military officer, who is the deputy chief of defence staff for personnel. I assume you're familiar with the wider U.K. model of who's in the MOD and how all of that works, but we can touch on that if that's helpful.
Basically, since 2000, when the British government for the first time established a Minister for Veterans, wider veterans policy has fallen to the Ministry of Defence. As for the reason it's in the Ministry of Defence, I'm not entirely sure. We might speculate on that if it's helpful.
Our model is one of integrated support across government departments, as well as local authorities and devolved administrations, in terms of wider health care, social care, employment, and wider benefits. What the MOD is responsible for in regard to veterans is pensions and no-fault compensation. That is for those who have been injured or made ill as a result of their military service. They would be able to claim under one of our no-fault compensation schemes--and I'll go into those in a moment--that provide additional support over and above that which is available to them as citizens.
In the U.K., we have had universal health and social care provided free at the point of delivery to all residents since 1948. That might explain, for many reasons, why we have not had a veterans minister for very long. It was more a realization, perhaps, that more coordination across government was required and that the MOD was a reasonable place to put the minister.
In departmental terms, what the Ministry of Defence delivers for those who've left the service is pension for those who are eligible, compensation on top of that for those who are injured or made ill as a result of service, and, I suppose, wider recognition. That's sort of the commemoration dimension and making sure that due respect is afforded to those who have served this country over the past years, including right back to the First World War. I think we have now in the U.K. three surviving veterans of that war.
In policy terms, the wider veterans piece is more about coordination and encouragement of other departments to provide appropriate services to veterans. Mostly, that means to ensure they're just getting what they're entitled to as citizens, and in some small cases, which we can perhaps go into, there is special treatment for veterans. That's principally in terms of health care. There is something called priority treatment for individuals who may have been injured as a result of service and who've now left. If they have an ongoing health need, they can get priority treatment through the National Health Service. The first test is one of clinical need. The second test, then, is priority, with the preferential treatment for the veteran, second to the clinical need of all patients.
I don't intend to say much more about the wider veterans piece unless that comes up in questions, but I'll give you a little insight into how we deal with pensions and compensation. I'll deal with pensions first. Really, what I mean by that are ordinary occupational employment benefits as part of a wider remuneration package. You're starting, obviously, with pay and terms and conditions of service. There may be access to preferential housing--certainly in service a provision of housing--and other wider benefits, but a significant part of the package is the pension.
As I say, that's something that every serving person is eligible for at the moment. There are various rules about eligibility, but really, anyone who does more than two years of service is vested in the scheme and therefore accrues benefits related to service. It's what we call a defined benefit scheme, so it's a kind of final salary scheme. I can explain what that might mean in more detail if that's necessary.
It's provided for on what we would call an unfunded or pay-as-you-go basis. There is no pension fund that's invested in and sort of held in stocks and shares and bonds. The actual pension is paid out or made from the general exchequer. In effect, the government holds those liabilities. I can talk about the size of that liability if that will be helpful. I'll just focus on the big principles for the time being.
Defined benefit means that there is certainty but what you're going to get out in the end is not reliant on the performance of the stock market. For those who serve a full career, there's a very generous pension at the end. Our pension system is designed so that it has the twin effect of encouraging people to serve longer. So the longer you serve, the more pension you will get. In our various schemes we have something to encourage people to around the age of 40. To give about 15 or 20 years of service, if one were to leave at that point, then there would be an income stream available and a lump sum as well, to ease the transition into people's second career. At the age of 40 one would reasonably expect people to do exactly that. Your state pension age for men and women is equalizing at age 65, so one would at least expect that the normal soldier who leaves, having had a full career with us, will have almost the same amount of time again in a second, third, fourth career. We provide what in one scheme is called an immediate pension, payable about the age of 40. There are slight differences between offices and other acts, but basically it's a device to pull through people to that point.
Those who serve longer continue to accrue additional benefits. Those who don't serve as far as that point will get what we would call a preserved pension or a deferred award. They might, let's say, leave service having done five or six years with the military. They will not leave with any immediate benefits but will have to wait until age 60 or 65 to start drawing down that preserved or deferred pension. In the crudest terms, the majority of service personnel leave their preserved award, but it's our senior long-commissioned officers, our warrant officers, who will get to that age 40 point, and around half of the officer cadre will get to that point. As I say, it's designed to pull through people to that point, because we are, as most military systems, bottom-fed. So we grow our own staff. We want to encourage people up the pyramid, but we don't have room for everybody at the top of the pyramid, so the device that we have for the immediate pension around age 40 allows an easy departure at that point with some encouragement and thanks and eases that transition into their second or third career.
Our principal scheme started around 1975, and we closed that to new entrants in 2005. We have a new scheme with some slightly different benefits, but overall it's about the same. We can go into the variations if that will be helpful. Basically, it provides similar sorts of benefits in a slightly different package. It costs us broadly about the same amount of money as an employer. That's the new entrants who have enrolled in the armed forces since 2005. Those already serving have a choice. They can stay with the existing pension arrangements or switch to the newer arrangements in 2005.
In terms of how that's paid for, it's a non-contributory scheme. Members in the armed forces do not contribute to their pension. It is entirely paid for by the government, which is part of the unique package that we offer to those who serve their country in the military. Other public sector employees, whether they're police, teachers, or workers in a national health service, or civil servants like myself, are in some kind of contributory pension arrangement. That is one of the distinct elements that we offer with the remuneration package to recognize the unique nature of military service. So that's the pension arrangements. We have about 300,000 pensions in payments. We have a similar sort of number of deferred pensioners, those not yet drawing their pension but no longer working for the military. We have about 200,000 people in service who are accruing benefits.
So that's a broad outline of the pension arrangements.
Regarding the no-fault compensation schemes, we had a legacy scheme that ran up until 2005 that was for those injured before that point. So it continues to pay out for new claimants but only for injuries that occurred before April 2005. That's what we call the war pensions scheme, and it has its origins back in the First World War. It's kind of a mini welfare state. So in addition to a pension payment in recognition of loss of earnings and pain and suffering, it also has a whole suite of allowances that actually were there because there was no welfare state. So there are health provisions, additional benefits in terms of you might need support carers to perhaps help one dress or with those daily life functions and there are allowances that provide for that. But all of that was because that provision was not there for every citizen. So the new scheme that came in 2005, which is called the armed forces compensation scheme, only focuses on the pain and suffering component; for those who have a loss of earnings impact due to their injury, it pays for that. What it doesn't do is have a broad suite of allowances for health or social care, because those are provided for every citizen already.
In terms of numbers in the war pensions scheme, there are about 180,000 people drawing a war pension and another 35,000 what we call war widows, those who lost their husband as a result of service or whose husbands died subsequently from a service-related injury. Most of those numbmers are actually in relation to the World War II generation. So the population for the war pensions scheme is decreasing about 5% per annum, and there are new people joining the scheme, because one of its features is that you could only get a war pension when you left service. The new compensation scheme, the armed forces compensation scheme, provides for much more immediate benefits. So one can claim within five years and get the lump sum element, the pain and suffering component, in service. Then for those who have an impact on their earnings capacity after they leave service, that would become payable immediately upon leaving service.
There are relatively small numbers of claimants under AFCS. I think we've paid out around 3,000 to 4,000 claims. And it's a growing scheme because it's for injuries that have been sustained after April 2005. People have five years to claim, so we're still receiving claims for injuries sustained in 2005. It's a scheme that we're keeping under review. There have been some changes made to it in the last year or two, most significantly last year as a part of the service personnel command paper, which is a cross-government-wide paper. One of the commitments in there was to enhance the amount of lump sum awards available under the compensation scheme, which we did, and we went back to the start of the scheme for all that.
I should provide a bit of context. Most of the claims that we've paid out since 2005 have actually been for relatively modest injuries, mostly musculoskeletal breaks, back pain, damaged knees, ligaments, and those sorts of things. I believe only 10% of the awards we've paid out have attracted a guaranteed income payment, which is what we call the income stream for loss of earnings. So the vast majority of claimants.... Despite what one might hear in the headlines of very large numbers of casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan, the reality is that, yes, there are very serious injuries being sustained there, but in scale terms they are actually relatively small, and the scheme accommodates for that too.
One further point I wanted to make about the compensation scheme is these are no-fault compensation schemes. This isn't a negligence-based scheme. The test is simply whether the illness or injury was caused or made worse by service. That might mean, in some cases, conflict-related injuries and casualties. It might mean training-related accidents. It might mean an illness that someone has acquired as a result of their military service, wherever that might be.
So it's not linked to conflicts. It's not linked to particular areas. If you're in the services and are injured as a result of service, then you're eligible for payments under the scheme.
That is not to say that if a degree of negligence is involved--for example, perhaps we haven't provided the appropriate equipment in certain circumstances--then service men and women are available in some circumstances to actually sue in tort for negligence. If that were to occur, we would take into account what we might have already paid under the no-fault schemes when we reached a settlement. But that's sort of to one side, not the principal issue. As I say, successive governments have been concerned about making sure that whether you're injured in training, on operations, or as part of your normal duty, then you've suffered. Appropriate compensation should be payable.
That's probably as much as I wanted to say in terms of setting the scene. I'm more than happy to take questions on any of that or on any further points you might have. I hope you've also seen the material I provided in correspondence beforehand. There's a wealth of material available there.
Again, I'd be happy to attempt to answer any questions you may have.