Who receives most? Gendered consequences of divorce on public pension income in West Germany and Sweden

IF 2.3 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY Ageing & Society Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1017/s0144686x23000703
Sarah Schmauk, Linda Kridahl
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Abstract

Sweden and West Germany have had persistently high divorce rates in recent decades, but these two welfare states were differently equipped to mitigate the economic consequences of divorce for individual security in old age: Sweden followed a gender-equal policy approach to enable women and men to achieve economic autonomy, while West Germany, following the male-breadwinner model, introduced the system of ‘divorce-splitting’ to account for differences in women's and men's income. Against this background, this study uses large-scale register data from the German Public Pension Fund and the Swedish population registers to examine how divorce is related to the monthly public old-age pension income of women and men. The main comparison groups are divorced and (re)married individuals who entered retirement between 2013 and 2018. We descriptively show annual income histories from ages 20 to 65, and calculate monthly public old-age pension income with respect to lifetime income and pension regulations, such as the supplements/deductions for ‘divorce-splitting’. Multiple ordinary least square regression models further examine how family status relates to monthly public old-age pension income by gender. The results reveal that women and men in Sweden experience similar working histories, although women's incomes are lower. This is also reflected in women still having lower pension incomes than men. However, divorced and married women show comparable pension incomes, while divorced men receive approximately 26 per cent less pension income than married men. In West Germany, divorced women have significantly higher pension incomes than married women. The system of ‘divorce-splitting’ increases women's and decreases men's pension incomes, which seems to equalise their pension incomes. However, both stay below a married man's pension income. The findings indicate economic inequality in public old-age pension income by family status in Sweden and West Germany.

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谁得到的最多?西德和瑞典离婚对公共养老金收入的性别影响
近几十年来,瑞典和西德的离婚率一直居高不下,但这两个福利国家在减轻离婚对个人老年保障造成的经济后果方面却有着不同的装备:瑞典采取性别平等的政策方针,使女性和男性都能实现经济自主,而西德则遵循男性养家糊口的模式,引入了 "离婚分割 "制度,以考虑女性和男性的收入差异。在此背景下,本研究利用德国公共养老基金和瑞典人口登记的大规模登记数据,研究离婚与女性和男性每月公共养老金收入的关系。主要比较组是在 2013 年至 2018 年期间进入退休阶段的离婚和(再)结婚者。我们描述性地展示了从 20 岁到 65 岁的年收入历史,并计算了与终身收入和养老金法规(如 "离婚分割 "的补充/扣除)相关的每月公共养老金收入。多重普通最小二乘法回归模型进一步研究了家庭状况与不同性别的公共养老金月收入之间的关系。结果显示,瑞典女性和男性的工作经历相似,但女性的收入较低。这也反映在女性的养老金收入仍然低于男性。不过,离婚妇女和已婚妇女的养老金收入相当,而离婚男子的养老金收入比已婚男子少约 26%。在西德,离婚妇女的养老金收入明显高于已婚妇女。离婚分割 "制度增加了妇女的养老金收入,减少了男子的养老金收入,这似乎使他们的养老金收入趋于平等。然而,两者的养老金收入都低于已婚男性。研究结果表明,在瑞典和西德,按家庭状况划分的公共养老金收入存在经济不平等。
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来源期刊
Ageing & Society
Ageing & Society GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
8.00%
发文量
144
期刊介绍: Ageing & Society is an interdisciplinary and international journal devoted to the understanding of human ageing and the circumstances of older people in their social and cultural contexts. It draws contributions and has readers from many disciplines including gerontology, sociology, demography, psychology, economics, medicine, social policy and the humanities. Ageing & Society promotes high-quality original research which is relevant to an international audience to encourage the exchange of ideas across the broad audience of multidisciplinary academics and practitioners working in the field of ageing.
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