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Journal ArticleDOI

Closing the Gender Gap in Retirement Income: What Difference Will Recent UK Pension Reforms Make?

Debora Price
- 01 Oct 2007 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 4, pp 561-583
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TLDR
A gendered analysis of the Pensions Commission proposals using unpublished data generated by Pensim2, a pensions' simulator developed by the Department for Work and Pensions is presented in this paper.
Abstract
The second report of the Pensions Commission sought to establish a framework for a sustainable pension system for future generations of pensioners in the UK. The framework has been largely accepted by government in their recent White Paper, Security in Retirement: Towards a New Pension System (2006). Legislation will follow. The Commission and the government have made a number of claims about how their proposals will benefit women. Reforms have been welcomed by women's lobby groups. This article presents a gendered analysis of the Pensions Commission proposals using unpublished data generated by Pensim2, a pensions' simulator developed by the Department for Work and Pensions. Substantial improvements for women will be in the long term only, and will depend heavily on the extent to which gendered patterns of work and family life change in future. For women who follow traditional paths of combining part-time work with looking after children and kin, outcomes will depend on partnering arrangements. If they are married or cohabiting, they will be better off; but if they live alone in later life, the principal advantage of the proposals will be a reduction in means testing rather than an improvement in levels of income.

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UK Pension Reforms: Is Gender Still an Issue?

TL;DR: In this paper, the UK Pensions Commission confirmed that women's domestic roles are crucial to their pension disadvantage, and proposed to make state pensions more inclusive for those with periods out of the labour market for family caring, as well as encouraging more saving through private pensions by those with low to moderate earnings.
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Helping the Poorest Help Themselves? Encouraging Employment Past 65 in England and the USA

TL;DR: In the UK, the poorest over 65s were more likely to work in the USA than in England in 2002 as discussed by the authors, and this was attributed to lower levels of health and education.
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‘I Might not Live That Long!’ A Study of Young Women's Pension Planning in the UK

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider young women's attitudes towards pensions and whether they differ according to socio-economic status by using interviews with 15 women (five in routine and manual occupations, five intermediate, five professional and managerial) about how knowledge and choice, trust, responsibility, risk and uncertainty impact on their pension decisions.
References
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Book

Money and Marriage

Jan Pahl
TL;DR: In this paper, the relationship between income and housekeeping money is investigated in the context of money and marriage and the historical evidence background to the study patterns of money management is provided.
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Money, Power and Inequality within Marriage:

TL;DR: The growing body of research on the intra-household economy suggests that in couple households there are significant associations between control over household finances and more general power with respect to money as discussed by the authors.
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Money in Marriage: How Patterns of Allocation Both Reflect and Conceal Power:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine perceptions of money within marriage, focusing upon the concepts of control and ownership, and consider the criteria involved in Pahl's (1983, 1989) typology for the allocation of money.
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Cohabiting couples: rethinking money in the household at the beginning of the twenty first century

TL;DR: The authors assesses the implications of existing research on the intra-household economy for current debates about the emergence of new forms of radically democratic intimate relationships in the late 'late '90s.
Journal Article

Cohabiting couples : rethinking money in the household at the beginning of the twenty first century : Individualisation and household dynamics

TL;DR: The authors assesses the implications of existing research on the intra-household economy for current debates about the emergence of new forms of radically democratic intimate relationships in 'late modern' or 'world risk' society.