Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Glossary of UK-based institutions and programmes
- Notes on contributors
- one Introduction
- two Older workers in the labour market: the demographic context
- three The American experience of age discrimination legislation
- four The employment of older people: can we learn from Japan?
- five Moving older people into jobs: Incapacity Benefit, Labour’s reforms and the job shortfall in the UK regions
- six Women’s knowledge of, and attitudes to, pensions
- seven Sustaining working lives: the challenge of retention
- eight Healthy work for older workers: work design and management factors
- nine Flexible work and older workers
- ten The employability of older workers: what works?
- eleven Is extending working life possible? Research and policy issues
- twelve The future for older workers: opportunities and constraints
- Index
six - Women’s knowledge of, and attitudes to, pensions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- Glossary of UK-based institutions and programmes
- Notes on contributors
- one Introduction
- two Older workers in the labour market: the demographic context
- three The American experience of age discrimination legislation
- four The employment of older people: can we learn from Japan?
- five Moving older people into jobs: Incapacity Benefit, Labour’s reforms and the job shortfall in the UK regions
- six Women’s knowledge of, and attitudes to, pensions
- seven Sustaining working lives: the challenge of retention
- eight Healthy work for older workers: work design and management factors
- nine Flexible work and older workers
- ten The employability of older workers: what works?
- eleven Is extending working life possible? Research and policy issues
- twelve The future for older workers: opportunities and constraints
- Index
Summary
Introduction
There is a school of thought that claims that women do not know much about pensions, do not understand them, and therefore do not join schemes or pay large sums out of their wages into personal pensions. If women understood pensions rather better, this argument goes, everything would be fine. This view was epitomised in the Department for Work and Pensions’ (DWP) 2002 Pensions Green Paper, which had a concluding section on women and pensions, tacked on rather as an afterthought. It went through a reasonably sound analysis of women's pension position, and its roots in their employment position and caring roles, and then concluded with one single action point:
The Government is committed to improving pensions information for everyone, but this is particularly important for women. Proposals in this Green Paper to promote informed choice, such as individualised pension forecasting, will help women. We propose to look at how best to ensure that women are aware of their pension position and the choices they face. We would welcome views. (DWP, 2002, p 121, emphasis in original)
This chapter is based on a literature review carried out in 2004 for the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC). That project was not a direct response to the DWP Green Paper, or to its approach to women's pensions issues, but it lay in the background. The project took the form of a literature search of readily available publications, taking 1995 as a fairly arbitrary starting point, because so much had changed in the decade after that. This was not a totally rigid criterion, however. For example, Field and Prior's 1996 report for the then Department of Social Security (DSS), Women and Pensions, was based on fieldwork in 1994-95, but was simply too central to the concerns of the review to omit. Nor was the research confined to academic literature or official publications. It includes a fair amount of material, though mostly rather superficial, from bodies such as the Association of British Insurers and other organisations that commission opinion polls and questions in omnibus market research surveys. Some searches were also carried out for useful non-UK material, in particular from Australia and the US, though these would not claim to be universal.
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- The Future for Older WorkersNew Perspectives, pp. 89 - 102Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2007