Abstract

This policy brief is designed to raise awareness of the current and future economic circumstances of older women, and the ways in which Social Security reform can help alleviate their unmet needs. It considers the gaps in benefit adequacy and economic security that are not addressed by current Social Security reform proposals and then suggests a series of modest, low-cost reforms to help close these gaps. If our proposals are adopted, Social Security reform will not only close the long-run financial deficit, but it will also greatly reduce the future poverty status of older women, particularly those who live alone. This is an opportunity for progressive reform as well as for budgetary balance. The Social Security program was designed over 60 years ago for a world in which mothers worked at home, raised children, and were widowed young, but not divorced; where fathers worked in industrial settings; and where both men and women had much shorter life expectancies at older ages than those of succeeding generations. Back in 1935 the founders of Social Security did not anticipate that women would become the major beneficiaries of the program. Increasingly, women rely on Social Security as the major source of their economic security at older ages, much more so than do men. Therefore, women are the group with the most to gain or lose from reform of the Social Security system and modification of its benefit formulae. Future women beneficiaries will be different. Women's lives are changing rapidly in many ways. More women work outside the home today, and about half of all marriages end in divorce.

Highlights

  • Single copies of this publication may be obtained at no cost from the CPR Web site at or from the Center for Policy Research, 426 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244-1020. This Policy Brief is designed to raise awareness of the current and future economic circumstances of older women, and the ways in which Social Security reform can help alleviate their unmet needs. It considers the gaps in benefit adequacy and economic security that are not addressed by current Social Security reform proposals and suggests a series of modest, low-cost reforms to help close these gaps

  • The Social Security program was designed over 60 years ago for a world in which mothers worked at home, raised children, and were widowed young, but not divorced; where fathers worked in industrial settings; and where both men and women had much shorter life expectancies at older ages than those of succeeding generations

  • Older women in the future will continue to be alone after the death of a spouse, to need formal care after the onset of disability at older age, and to spend longer time in retirement at older ages. These results suggest that many of tomorrow’s female Social Security recipients will be no better off than today’s, and that poverty and insecurity will be as much a problem of older women in 2020 as in 1991 or 1999

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Summary

Introduction

This Policy Brief is designed to raise awareness of the current and future economic circumstances of older women, and the ways in which Social Security reform can help alleviate their unmet needs. One can hope that women’s earnings, Social Security benefits, and private pensions will grow to mirror those of men, but we must realize that tomorrow’s women will experience many of the same insecurities and risks due to their social roles and career work and family patterns as do those of today (Iams and Sandell 1998). Social Security reform proposals are designed to provide financial stability by closing the projected long-run gap between revenues and liabilities of the Social Security system, but by and large they are not designed to increase benefit adequacy or economic security, or to lower poverty rates among older women. Other measures are needed to increase the economic well-being of older women and provide a true floor to their Social Security income The goal of this brief is to outline a set of interrelated strategies rather than to suggest one single strategy for reducing poverty in very old age. All three work together to play an important role in alleviating economic insecurity and poverty in old age

Policy Options for Survivors’ Benefits
Policy Options for Divorcees
Policy Options for Economically Vulnerable Older Women
Findings
Conclusions and Future Steps
Full Text
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