Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xm8r8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-16T07:48:58.510Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Understanding millennial women's attitudes towards the state pension in the United Kingdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2023

Liam Foster*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK

Abstract

Many international pension systems have undergone extensive changes over recent decades, associated with a dominant narrative of the need to respond to the pressures of population ageing. This has resulted in an increasing emphasis on curtailing the role of the state and promoting individual responsibility for pension saving. However, there is currently limited research which considers attitudes and expectations surrounding pension developments and, in particular, the role of state pensions. This is despite these factors influencing pension savings behaviour. Existing research suggests that under-saving is most common amongst women (linked to their more fragmented employment histories throughout the lifecourse) and millennials (born in the early 1980s up to the mid- to late 1990s), indicating the importance of better understanding their attitudes and expectations regarding pensions. This article aims to address this knowledge gap by exploring, in the United Kingdom, millennial women's knowledge, attitudes and expectations regarding state pensions, using 45 qualitative interviews and a focus group. The findings demonstrate that millennial women's situation regarding state pensions is characterised by a lack of knowledge, awareness and certainty, which influences their pensions behaviour. It identifies that, in general, pensions were not perceived as a current financial priority, with more immediate priorities taking precedence. Active engagement with pensions and uncertainties throughout the lifecourse, many of which people cannot control, presented a challenge to pension saving. Retirement was often seen as a distinct stage, with participants struggling to visualise their long-term future. The research contributes to the limited international understanding of attitudes towards pension knowledge and expectations, and their links to pension behaviour. It highlights the need for measures to encourage a greater focus on longer-term saving habits, accompanied by a context of collective policy solutions to pension challenges, as opposed to framing pensions in a purely individualised neo-liberal policy framework which adversely impacts on women's pension prospects.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Airey, L and Jandrić, J (2020) United Kingdom. In Ni Léime, A, Ogg, J, Rašticová, M, Street, D, Krekula, C, Bédiová, M and Madero-Cabib, I (eds), Extending Working Life Policies: International Gender and Health Perspectives. London: Springer, pp. 469479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altmann, R (2015) A New Vision for Older Workers: Retain, Retrain, Recruit. London: Department for Work and Pensions.Google Scholar
Beach, B and Bedell, G (2019) The EXTEND Project: Exploring Pension Reforms, Work and Inequality. London: ILC.Google Scholar
Bebbington, D (2019) You know something is wrong when your grandmother starts protesting: the impact of the rise in State Pension Age on women in the UK. Women's Studies International Forum 75, 102235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benartzi, S and Thaler, R (2007) Heuristics and biases in retirement savings behavior. Journal of Economic Perspectives 21, 81104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, C (2021) Pensions Imperilled: The Political Economy of Private Pensions Provision in the UK. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boden, R (2021) Pensioned off? Evaluating the UK's National Insurance scheme. Public Money and Management 41, 646655.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bosanquet, N, Haldenby, A, Parsons, L, Truss, E and Baxter, L (2008) Money's Too Tight to Mention: Will the IPOD Generation Ever Trust Financial Services? Reform and the Chartered Insurance Institute. Available at http://www.cii.co.uk/downloaddata/CIIReform_Moneys-too-tight-to-mention_October2008.pdf.Google Scholar
Brimblecombe, S and McClanahan, S (2019) Improving gender outcomes in social security retirement systems. Social Policy and Administration 53, 327342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brinkmann, S and Kvale, S (2018) Doing Interviews. London: Sage.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, M and Lloyd, J (2014) Who Saves for Retirement? 2: Eligible Non-savers. London: Institute for Social and Economic Research.Google Scholar
Bryan, M, Lloyd, J, Rabe, B and Taylor, M (2011) Who Saves for Retirement? London: Institute for Social and Economic Research.Google Scholar
Carrino, L, Glaser, K and Avendano Pabon, M (2020) Later pension, job strain and poorer health: evidence from the new State Pension Age in the United Kingdom. Health Economics 29, 891911.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, G, Strauss, K and Knox-Hayes, J (2012) Saving for Retirement: Intention, Context and Behaviour. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, R and Karjalainen, H (2020) Awareness of state pension entitlements. In Banks, J, Nazroo, J, Steptoe, A and Zaninotto, P (eds), The Dynamics of Ageing: Evidence from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (2002–2019). London: Institute for Fiscal Studies, pp. 1052.Google Scholar
Cribb, J and Emmerson, C (2019) Can't wait to get my pension: the effect of raising the female early retirement age on income, poverty and deprivation. Journal of Pension Economics and Finance 18, 450472.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cribb, J, Emmerson, C and Tetlow, G (2014) Labour supply effects of increasing the female state pension age in the UK from age 60 to 62. Institute for Fiscal Studies, London, Working Paper W 14/19. Available at http://www.ifs.org.uk/uploads/publications/wps/wp201419.pdf.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cridland, J (2017) Smoothing the Transition: Independent Review of the State Pension Age. Independent Report. The Stationery Office. Available at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/state-pension-age-independent-review-final-report.Google Scholar
Della Giusta, M and Longhi, S (2020) Stung by pension reforms: the impact of a change in state pension age on mental health and life satisfaction of affected women. Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn, Germany, IZA Discussion Paper 13587.Google Scholar
Department for Work and Pensions (2013) The Single-tier Pension: A Simple Foundation for Saving. London: The Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Di Gessa, G, Corna, L, Platts, L, Worts, D, McDonough, P, Sacker, A, Price, D and Glaser, K (2017) Is being in paid work beyond state pension age beneficial for health? Evidence from England using a life-course approach. Journal of Epidemiology Community Health 71, 431438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dixon, A (2020) The Age of Ageing Better? A Manifesto for Our Future. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.Google Scholar
Driva, A, Lührmann, M and Winter, J (2016) Gender differences and stereotypes in financial literacy: off to an early start. Economics Letters 146, 143146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ebbinghaus, B (2015) The privatization and marketization of pensions in Europe: a double transformation facing the crisis. European Policy Analysis 1, 5673.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fernández-López, S, Vivel-Búa, M, Otero-González, L and Durán-Santomil, P (2015) Exploring the gender effect on Europeans’ retirement savings. Feminist Economics 21, 118150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, L (2010) Towards a new political economy of pensions? The implications for women. Critical Social Policy 30, 2747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, L (2017) Young people and attitudes towards pension planning. Social Policy and Society 16, 6580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, L (in press) Pensions and the extending working lives agenda in the UK: the impact on women. Journal of Population Ageing.Google Scholar
Foster, L and Heneghan, M (2018) Pensions planning in the UK: a gendered challenge. Critical Social Policy 38, 345366.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foster, L, Heneghan, M and Wijeratne, D (2019) Women millennials’ perceptions of pension savings through the use of autoenrollment in the UK pension system. Journal of Women and Aging 31, 340360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
FT Adviser (2018) Over-65s Rely Heavily on State Pension. Available at https://www.ftadviser.com/pensions/2018/12/17/over65s-rely-heavily-on-state-pension/.Google Scholar
Future Foundation (2010) Visions of Britain 2020: Ageing and Retirement. Dorking: Future Foundation/Friends Provident.Google Scholar
Gilbert, N (2002) Transformation of the Welfare State: The Silent Surrender of Public Responsibility. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilleard, C and Higgs, P (2013) The fourth age and the concept of a ‘social imaginary’: a theoretical excursus. Journal of Aging Studies 27, 368376.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ginn, J (2003) Gender, Pensions and the Lifecourse: How Pensions Need to Adapt to Changing Family Forms. Bristol, UK: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Ginn, J and Macintyre, K (2013) UK pension reforms: is gender still an issue? Social Policy and Society 13, 91103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaser, B and Strauss, A (1967) The Discovery of Grounded Theory. Chicago, IL: Aldine.Google Scholar
Grady, J (2015) Gendering pensions: making women visible. Gender, Work and Organization 22, 445458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hills, J (2003) Inclusion or insurance? National Insurance and the future of the contributory principle. London School of Economics and Political Science, CASE Paper 68. Available at http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/5563/.Google Scholar
HM Treasury (2016) Financial Advice Market Review. Final Report. Available at https://www.fca.org.uk/static/fca/documents/famr-final-report.pdf.Google Scholar
Holman, D, Foster, L and Hess, M (2020) Inequalities in women's awareness of changes to the State Pension Age in England and the role of cognitive ability. Ageing & Society 40, 144161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Longevity Centre-UK (2015) Planning Tomorrow Today: Financial Advice Market Review. Available at http://www.ilcuk.org.uk/images/uploads/publication-pdfs/Financial_Advice_Market_Review_Call_for_Input_-_Response(002).Pdf.Google Scholar
James, H (2021) Individual pension decision-making in a financialised landscape: a typology of everyday approaches. Journal of Cultural Economy 14, 627643.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
James, H, Price, D and Buffel, T (2020) How do people think about later life when making workplace pension saving decisions? Journal of Aging Studies 54, 100869.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jandrić, J, Airey, L, Loretto, W and Vickerstaff, S (2019) DAISIE Country Report Lives Working Paper 2019 /77.3: United Kingdom. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.12682/lives.2296-1658.2019.77.3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krekula, C and Vickerstaff, S (2020) The ‘older worker’ and the ‘ideal worker’: a critical examination of concepts and categorisations in the rhetoric of extending working lives. In Ni Léime, A, Ogg, J, Rašticová, M, Street, D, Krekula, C, Bédiová, M and Madero-Cabib, I (eds), Extending Working Life Policies: International Gender and Health Perspectives. London: Springer, pp. 2945.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuitto, K, Kuivalainen, S and Möhring, K (2021) Inequalities in pensions and retirement from a lifecourse perspective: an introduction. Social Policy and Administration 55, 403408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lain, D (2016) Reconstructing Retirement: Work and Welfare in the UK and USA. Bristol, UK: Policy Press.Google Scholar
Lain, D, Van der Horst, M and Vickerstaff, S (2019) Extending working lives: feasible and desirable for all? In Czaja, S, James, J, Grosch, J and Sharit, J (eds), Current and Emerging Trends in Aging and Work. London: Springer, pp. 101119.Google Scholar
Langley, P (2008) The Everyday Life of Global Finance: Saving and Borrowing in Anglo America. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mabbett, D (2012) The ghost in the machine: pension risks and regulatory responses in the United States and the United Kingdom. Politics and Society 40, 107129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacLeod, P, Fitzpatrick, A, Hamlyn, B, Jones, A, Kinver, A and Page, L (2012) Attitudes to Pensions: The 2012 Survey (Research Report No. 813). London: Department for Work and Pensions.Google Scholar
Macnicol, J (2015) Neoliberalising Old Age. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mason, J (2002) Qualitative Researching. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Mayhew, L (2021) On the postponement of increases in state pension age through health improvement and active ageing. Applied Spatial Analysis 14, 315336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Old Mutual (2017) The In-betweeners: A Generation Between Pension Regimes. London: Old Mutual Wealth.Google Scholar
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (2018) Ageing and Employment Policies: United States 2018. Working Better with Age and Fighting Unequal Ageing. Available at https://read.oecd-ilibrary.org/employment/ageing-and-employment-policies-united-states-2018_9789264190115-en#page23.Google Scholar
Payne, G and Williams, M (2005) Generalization in qualitative research. Sociology 39, 295314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pemberton, H (2017) WASPI's is (mostly) a campaign for inequality. The Political Quarterly 86, 510516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pensions Policy Institute (PPI) (2016) The Under-pensioned 2016. London: PPI.Google Scholar
Pensions Policy Institute (PPI) (2018) The impact of the introduction of automatic enrolment on future generations. PPI, London, Briefing Note 105.Google Scholar
Pensions World (2015) Youngsters Need Reality Check on Pensions Says Aegon. Available at http://www.pensionsworld.co.uk/pw/article/youngsters-need-reality-check-on-pension-savings-says-aegon-12335409.Google Scholar
Pettigrew, N, Taylor, J, Simpson, C, Lancaster, J and Madden, R (2007) Live Now, Save Later? Young People, Saving and Pension (Research Report No. 438). Leeds, UK: The Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Phillipson, C (2019) ‘Fuller’ or ‘extended’ working lives: critical perspectives on changing transitions from work to retirement. Ageing & Society 39, 629650.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phillipson, C, Vickerstaff, S and Lain, D (2016) Achieving fuller working lives: labour market and policy issues in the United Kingdom. Australian Journal of Social Issues 51, 187204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pickard, L (2019) Age war as the new class war? Contemporary representations of intergenerational inequity. Journal of Social Policy 48, 369386.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prabhakar, R (2017) Why do people opt-out or not opt-out of automatic enrolment? A focus group study of automatic enrolment into a workplace pension in the United Kingdom. Journal of European Social Policy 27, 447457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, D (2007) Closing the gender gap in retirement income: what difference will recent UK pension reforms make? Journal of Social Policy 36, 561583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, D (2015) Financing later life: why financial capability agendas may be problematic. Working with Older People 19, 4148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, P (2021) The equalisation of the state pension age in United Kingdom: indirect sex discrimination? International Journal of Discrimination and the Law 21, 157167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertson-Rose, L (2019) Good job, good pension? The influence of the workplace on saving for retirement. Ageing & Society 39, 24832501.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scottish Widows (2012) Women and Pensions Report: Mind the Gap. Available at http://www.scottishwidows.co.uk/documents/generic/2012_women_and_pensions_report.pdf.Google Scholar
Sennett, R (2006) The Culture of the New Capitalism. London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Strauss, A and Corbin, J (1990) Basics of Qualitative Research. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Strauss, K (2014) Accessing pension resources: the right to equality inside and out of the labour market. International Journal of Law in Context 10, 522537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Street, D and Ginn, J (2001) The demographic debate: the gendered political economy of pensions. In Ginn, J, Street, D and Arber, S (eds), Women, Work and Pensions: International Issues and Prospects. Buckingham, UK: Open University Press, pp. 3143.Google Scholar
Suh, E (2020) Younger Adults’ Retirement Saving and Wealth Accumulation in Britain: A Quantitative Investigation. London: London School of Economics and Political Science.Google Scholar
Suh, E (2022) Can't save or won't save: financial resilience and discretionary retirement saving among British adults in their thirties and forties. Ageing & Society 42, 29402967.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor-Gooby, P, Heur, J, Chung, H, Leruth, B, Mau, S and Zimmermann, K (2020) Regimes, social risks and the welfare mix: unpacking attitudes to pensions and childcare in Germany and the UK through de-liberative forums. Journal of Social Policy 49, 6179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thurley, D and Keen, R (2018) State pension age increases for women born in the 1950s. House of Commons Library, London, Briefing Paper CBP-7405.Google Scholar
Townsend, P (2007) Using human rights to defeat ageism: dealing with policy induced ‘structured dependency’. In Bernard, M and Scharf, T (eds), Critical Perspectives on Ageing Societies. Cambridge: Polity Press, pp. 2744.Google Scholar
Trades Union Congress (TUC) (2021) Extending Working Lives – How to Support Older Workers. Available at https://www.tuc.org.uk/research-analysis/reports/extending-working-lives-how-support-older-workers.Google Scholar
Vickerstaff, S and Loretto, W (2017) The United Kingdom – a new moral imperative: live longer, work longer. In Ní Léime, A, Street, D, Vickerstaff, S, Krekula, C and Loretto, W (eds), Gender, Ageing and Extended Working Life: Cross-national Perspectives. Bristol, UK: Policy Press, pp. 175192.Google Scholar
Wainwright, D, Crawford, J, Loretto, W, Phillipson, C, Robinson, M, Shepherd, S, Vickerstaff, S and Weyman, A (2019) Extending working life and the management of change. Is the workplace ready for the ageing worker? Ageing & Society 39, 23972419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webb, R, Watson, D, Ring, P and Bryce, C (2014) Pension confusion, uncertainty and trust in Scotland: an empirical analysis. Journal of Social Policy 43, 595613.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weyman, A, Wainwright, D, O'Hara, R, Jones, P and Buckingham, A (2012) Extending Working Life: Behaviour Change Intervention. London: Department for Work and Pensions.Google Scholar
Wicks, R and Horack, S (2009) Incentives to Save for Retirement: Understanding, Perceptions and Behaviour – A Literature Review. Leeds, UK: The Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Wildman, J (2020) Life-course influences on extended working: experiences of women in a UK baby-boom birth cohort. Work, Employment and Society 34, 211227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Work and Pensions Committee (2015) House of Commons – Communication of State Pension Age Changes. Available at https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201516/cmselect/cmworpen/899/89906.htm.Google Scholar