1 / 41

Behind Closed Doors: Financial inequalities within older couples

Behind Closed Doors: Financial inequalities within older couples. DEBBIE PRICE & RACHEL STUCHBURY DINAH BISDEE AND TOM DALY BSG 2009, 2 nd – 4 th SEPTEMBER INSTITUTE OF GERONTOLOGY debora.price@kcl.ac.uk rachel.stuchbury@kcl.ac.uk dinah.bisdee@kcl.ac.uk thomas.daly@kcl.ac.uk.

ava-wynn
Télécharger la présentation

Behind Closed Doors: Financial inequalities within older couples

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Behind Closed Doors: Financial inequalities within older couples DEBBIE PRICE & RACHEL STUCHBURY DINAH BISDEE AND TOM DALY BSG 2009, 2nd – 4th SEPTEMBER INSTITUTE OF GERONTOLOGY debora.price@kcl.ac.uk rachel.stuchbury@kcl.ac.uk dinah.bisdee@kcl.ac.uk thomas.daly@kcl.ac.uk

  2. Background – ‘Behind Closed Doors’ Project How do the financial resources of men and women differ within and between older couples? What are the drivers of difference? Quantitative Study How do older couples view, manage and negotiate about money? What (if any) are the implications of within-couple unequal ownership of financial resources for the well-being of older people and their families? Two Qualitative Studies – focus groups and couple/individual interviews What ageing and ageist discourses and practices are prevalent in the formulation of government policy relating to money? How do these relate to the money practices of older couples? Policy Study

  3. Project Website Portal for information on older people and later life: finance, care, health, housing, advice, wills and end of life issues Findings Outputs Web Survey Researcher Blogs Public views About the project www.householdmoney.co.uk

  4. Within couple financial inequality • Understanding human behaviour; challenging the social order; influencing policy • Feminist critique of the family: men have financial resources and women are dependent • Implications for power, control and gender relations within and outside the household: • Women’s access to resources and decision making among older couples will be limited • Women will be satisfied with unequal access to resources • Women will sacrifice consumption within households • Women may experience poverty within non-poor households • Power and control within the household is connected to power and control outside the household • Implications for well being in widowhood/after divorce & vulnerability to poverty and social exclusion

  5. Research Questions (Project) • Present a nationally representative statistical picture of financial inequality between and within older couple households, investigating how different sources of income in later life contribute to or ameliorate financial inequality within households; • Through multivariate analysis, investigate the correlates of later life inequality and consider whether within-couple inequality in later life is associated with measures of quality of life;

  6. Outline • Data considerations & epistemological issues • Couple descriptives & financial decision making • Gendered financial inequality of partnered older people • Financial inequality within partnerships • Exploratory analysis of correlates

  7. ELSA • People aged 50 and over and their younger partners, living in private households in England. • Sample drawn from households that had previously responded to the Health Survey for England (HSE) in 1998, 1999 or 2001. • Fieldwork: March 2002 and March 2003. Repeated interviews, historical data added. • Wave 1: approx 12,000 people; IFS derived financial variables (with imputed data) • Project spec: analysis of Wave 1 of ELSA; hope in future to add histories, and act as baseline data for longitudinal analysis

  8. Data Collection: Income and Assets • Research questions require that information about income and assets is collected separately for men and women in a couple, but: “Later in the interview, I would like to ask some questions about finances generally, for example income and savings. Can I just check, do you and name keep your finances totally separate?” If person is living as part of a married or cohabiting couple and has indicated finances are shared between the couple, questions go to respondent on behalf of the couple. If person is living as part of a married or cohabiting couple and has indicated finances are not shared between the couple, questions go to each respondent separately. • Asset information – only collected at benefit unit level even though wide disparities in ownership between partners • Even apart from gender issues within the household, increasingly important for understanding financial well being in later life, especially increasing prevalence of second & subsequent marriages where spouse may not inherit

  9. Epistemological Issues • Project raises epistemological issues with the way data on assets, wealth has been collected and reported • Relatively few couples would say finances were “totally separate” – powerful norm to present ‘jointness’ within partnerships • Joint does not mean joint, covers a whole range of arrangements including some that are quite separate • Couples unaware of each others’ finances • Secret money • But income: at least attempts are made to collect separate data • Assets: information not collected for each couple unless they have declared finances “totally separate” • in analysis, income from assets has been apportioned equally between partners – no other options • ‘Benefit Unit’ discourse pervades data collection

  10. ELSA: focus on benefit unit • Individual section on work and pensions collects information from individuals about their work and pension income • Not used in IFS derived financial variables, which focus on benefit units • Income and assets section (used in IFS derived financial variables) • collects information largely from one person in the couple about either individual or joint income (but not about individual occupational or personal pensions, broad brush on work income); • if couple did not say that there income is totally separate, one person only answers and then • all assets are considered joint assets (whether individually or jointly held); • income from assets is also considered joint regardless of how held. • In IFS derived variables, all assets and income from these are attributed to both parties if one person is answering for both. • Large amounts of imputed data (but clearly flagged and transparent) • Data can’t be used to examine individual asset ownership within couples, except for couples who answer separately; query individual income where proxy answers, and income from assets can’t be apportioned.

  11. Older Couples • 4,503 heterosexual couples (9,006 people) • 4,025 with financial data about both partners • 1,960 couples where one partner is over 65 • 1, 817 with financial data about both partners

  12. Marital Status of ELSA Couples Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3, couples where at least one member is over 50

  13. Living Arrangements Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3, couples where at least one member is over 50

  14. Separate or Joint Finances of Couples? Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  15. Who answered the Income & Assets Section? • Gendered issues of power and control • 94% of cases: at least one of the couple answered the financial questions; 5% missing; 1% other household member answered Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  16. Organisation of Money (Individuals) Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  17. Who has final say in big financial decisions? Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  18. Outliers for men into the hundreds of thousands of pounds 72% of men in couples in receipt of some private or occupational pension income 28% of women in couples in receipt of some private or occupational pension income Distribution of income from private and occupational pensions for those in receipt, couples 65+ Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  19. Outliers for men up to £60,000 11% of men aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from paid work or business 7% of women aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from paid work or business Distribution of income from paid work or business for those in receipt, couples 65+ Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  20. 94% of men aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from state pension 93% of women aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from state pension Distribution of weekly income from state pension for those in receipt, couples 65+ Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  21. 4% of men aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from state income support 1% of women aged 65+ in couples in receipt of some income from state income support Income support is assessed at benefit unit level, but paid to the claimant Distribution of weekly income from state income support for those in receipt, couples 65+ Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3

  22. Gender differences in annual net income from private/occ pensions & paid work, men and women, 65+, in couples

  23. Gender Differences in Net Weekly Income

  24. Quintiles of Individual Income, 65+ in Couples, according to sex Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  25. Components of Net Weekly Income Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  26. Relative Importance of Income Components Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3, couples where at least one member is over 65

  27. Inequality of income within couples, (1+=65+) Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  28. Distribution of Income Inequality within Couples Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  29. Income inequality within couples, 65+

  30. Income quintile, age and within couple inequality Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  31. Social class, age and within couple income inequality Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  32. Man’s Social Class and Income Inequality

  33. Woman’s Social Class and Income Inequality

  34. Educational qualifications, age and within couple income inequality Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  35. Woman’s Education and Income Inequality

  36. Health, age and income inequality within couples Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  37. Marital status, age, and income inequality within couples Source: ELSA, Wave 1, 2002/3 Couples where at least one member is over 65

  38. Woman’s Marital Status and Income Inequality

  39. Further Work • Understanding the role that different components of income play in within-couple financial inequality • Multivariate modelling of financial inequality within couples in later life • Possibly adding lifecourse history data from Wave 2 • Testing whether within couple financial inequality is related to quality of life outcomes e.g. marriage quality, health • Understanding the drivers of financial inequality between couples in later life • Considering explanations and implications arising from the qualitative strand of the project

  40. Conclusions • The financial contributions of men and women within older couples are very unequal, especially state pensions, private pensions and earnings from paid work • Older couples are poorer, but at all ages from 65 to 85, median partnered women’s income is about 38% of partnered men’s • Older partnered women dominate the lower individual income quintiles, and older partnered men the higher; private pensions are the main driver of difference • Within older couples, at all ages, women contribute about 30% to the couple’s joint income • A quarter of women contribute between 0% and 20%, and only 5% more than 60% • Social class, education and marital status all play a (small?) part in explaining income inequality within the household; age, health and income quintiles seem to have little impact • Multivariate analysis will help to understand the mechanisms at work

  41. Conclusions • The data suggests that gendered financial inequality within couples is a lifelong condition that men and women must find ways of accommodating • A substantial body of work on younger couples suggests that such inequality has implications for power, control and access to resources within relationships, as well as impacts on wider society • Through our qualitative work we hope to contribute to understanding the importance of age and ageing in these debates

More Related