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Anette Eva Fasang, Silke Aisenbrey, Klaus Schömann, Women’s Retirement Income in Germany and Britain, European Sociological Review, Volume 29, Issue 5, October 2013, Pages 968–980, https://doi.org/10.1093/esr/jcs075
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Abstract
This article analyses women’s retirement income in the context of two distinct welfare states. In addition to women’s employment history, we consider their marital history over the life course as an important determinant of retirement income. We use longitudinal data for women born between 1930 and 1940 from the German Socio-Economic Panel and the British Household Panel Study. The results shed light on the mechanisms through which welfare states transmit gender inequality over the life course into retirement. In both countries, single women have higher retirement income than continuously married women. But there are also significant cross-country differences. In the corporatist-conservative German welfare state, marriage over the life course leads to greater dependence on a male breadwinner in retirement than in the liberal British welfare state.