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Men (me included) do not always realise that most women are "socially
excluded" and penalised by pension systems because they have been busy
bringing up our children.
The following article is composed of extracts from a booklet - written by
Zelda Curtis - published by
the National Pensioners Convention.
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Spotlight on Women's Pensions -
by Zelda Curtis.
How the pension system fails women.
October 2000. Price £1. |
INTRODUCTION
An adequate income in old age is fundamental to the wellbeing of older
people. A low income results in a life lacking in quality, choice and
independence. For older women this is exacerbated by the sexism and ageism
rife in our society, which renders them invisible and unheard. They are
socially excluded.
Women make up the majority of pensioners, particularly amongst the most
elderly. They also make up the majority of the poorest pensioners.
Therefore, in considering the government's pensions policy it is essential
to examine the difference in its effect on women and men. The way a
pensions system treats women is a measure of its quality and fairness.
Women's very different working patterns - typically including many
years out of the labour market and/or in part time work whilst caring
for children - mean they are disadvantaged in independent, employment
based pensions.
WOMEN, WORK AND CARING RESPONSIBILITIES
Women are handicapped in building a good pension income because pension
systems were originally designed for those with continuous full time
employment.
As it is still the case that women take the majority of responsibility
for caring for children, as well as caring for sick and elderly relatives
and looking after the household, the average woman spends many years
outside the labour market and additional years working part time. During
these years women are unable to build entitlement to employment-based
pensions. Additionally, women in work still earn less on average than men.
Women full timers earn on average 80% of male full timers hourly rate
and of women part timers just 60%. So even whilst in work women are liable
to build up less entitlement to pension income. To obtain sufficient
occupational or personal pension for an income well above Income Support
level, it is necessary to have been employed full time for most of your
working life. Amongst women aged over 65 the average time in employment
was just 27 years, with only 19 of those in full time employment.
There are also large differences between married and non-married women
with average time in full employment at 17 years for married women
compared to 35 years for single women in full employment.
Altogether, only 19% of older women worked for more than 30 years between
the ages of 25 and 55, compared with 93% of men, and many of women's
working years were part time. Thirty nine years of contributions are
needed to qualify for the full basic State Pension and even with Home
Responsibility Protection - introduced by Labour in 1978 to protect women
with caring responsibilities - 20 years of contributions are required.
Changes to the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (SERPS) have
been particularly damaging to women. The original formula of using the'20
best years rule' - a major advance for women as carers - was changed, so
that the average earnings over the whole working life are used. Will
women's increased employment mean better pensions in the future? This is
not guaranteed, as most of the increase is due to part time work. Almost
half of all women in employment work part time and 20% work less than 8
hours per week.
The current pension system is biased against women in many ways. In
reviewing the system and trying to improve it, we need to consider the
gender impact of any changes made. As men's working patterns become more
similar to women's, with increased part time work and insecure employment,
any changes which support women will also benefit men.
We should work towards a pension system which:
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gives women access to a fair and independent income in retirement
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does not penalise women for years out of the labour market, caring
for children or frail relatives
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provides access to private pensions for part time and temporary
workers on the same basis as full time employees on standard contracts
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avoids pension penalties for those who change jobs many times
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acknowledges women's greater tendency to live alone in old age, and
does not result in hardship for widows and divorcees.
Schemes which are wholly based on lifetime earnings place women at some
disadvantage. Providing means-tested benefits is no solution. It creates
savings and pension traps, stigmatises recipients and is widely condemned
by the poorest.
The first replacement for a pension system which is fair to women is an
improved basic pension indexed to national earnings. A state second tier
earnings related pension scheme is also necessary. Unlike private pension
schemes, a state scheme is portable between jobs, inexpensive to
administer, and can allow for women's caring responsibilities through a '
best year' formula and home responsibility protection or carer credits.
Proposals for any alternative system must be carefully scrutinised for
their gender impact.
One alternative system that is gaining attention is the introduction of
a Citizen's Pension as in Denmark. That would amount to paying the MIG
automatically (without any means test) to all pensioners. Other countries
have devised ways of clawing back from the well-off either through the tax
system or other means.
A Citizen's Pension (replacing other state pensions) would be simple to
understand and administer. It would relieve the state of the complex
calculations of individuals' employment and earnings record and of the
even more convoluted tracking of derived pension entitlements as women
divorce, are widowed and remarry.
Moreover, the rebate and incentive to opt out of state second tier pension
(amounting, with tax relief on private pension, to about £20 billion in
tax spending) could be saved. Both a Citizen's Pension or a substantial
rise in the basic pension are affordable, as shown by the Millennium Paper
on Paying for Age, by London Age Concern. Either would be of great benefit
to women now and in the future.
It is interesting to note also the responses of some women's organisations
to the Government's pension proposals.
The National Assembly of Women said: "For women pensioners and for
most women in their 50s, the proposals offer nothing but more
means-testing. In the longer term, the State Pension, as proposed, would
provide a subsistence level income. Only a minority of women would be able
to build enough private pension to escape the poverty trap,"
The Women's National Commission said, "A move away from benefits to
a decent income in retirement will not be achieved by a Minimum Income
Guarantee of just £75. By the target year of 2050 an equally high
proportion of the population will be dependent on benefits."
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