4 research outputs found
The Effects of Defamilisation and Familisation Measures on the Accumulation of Retirement Income for Women in the UK
This paper is concerned with the link between the effects of pro-market pension reforms
on women and familisation/defamilisation measures. It aims to contribute to the study of this
link in three ways. Firstly, it identifies defamilisation/familisation measures which have the
potential to reduce negative effects of pro-market pension measures on women. Secondly,
based on the examples from the UK, it shows that the government’s willingness to provide
sufficient defamilisation/familisation measures to assist women to deal with the negative
effects of the pro-market pension measures should not be taken for granted. Thirdly, it
suggests ways for tackling this problem
The relationship between women’s work histories and incomes in later life in the UK, US and West Germany
Using data from several large-scale longitudinal surveys, this article investigates the relationship between the work histories and personal incomes (from both public and private sources) of older women in the UK, US and West Germany. By comparing three countries with different welfare regimes and pension systems, we seek to gain a better understanding of the interaction between the life course, pension system and women’s incomes in later life. The association between older women’s incomes and work histories is strongest in West Germany and weakest in the UK, where there is evidence of a ‘pensions poverty trap’ and where only predominantly full-time employment is associated with significantly higher incomes in later life. Work history matters less for widows (in all three countries) and more for recent birth cohorts and more educated women (UK only). The article concludes with a brief discussion of the treatment of women under different pension regimes assessed by the criteria of adequacy, proportionality, vertical equity and horizontal equity