Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Social
Security’s Value for Women
December 20, 2010--Without Social Security,
research indicates that about half of women
age 65 and older would be living in poverty.
With the program in place, the poverty rate
for women falls to 12 percent.
These facts — paired with recommended future
courses of action — are presented in the
latest installment of the Public Policy &
Aging Research Brief series from the National
Academy on an Aging Society, the
public policy branch of The
Gerontological Society of America (GSA).
The new publication, “For Millions of Older
Women, Social Security Is a Lifeline,” was
funded by grant support from The
Retirement Research Foundation and
represents a current synthesis of knowledge
about Social Security’s long-term impact on
women’s financial security.
“Older women — especially those who are not
married — rely heavily on Social Security,
as this research brief makes clear,” said
GSA Pubic Policy Committee Chair Sara Rix,
PhD. “Relatively modest changes to restore
solvency to the Social Security system would
ensure that these women and the generations
that follow them will be able to depend on
their Social Security benefits well into the
future.”
In recent years, Social Security’s financial
position has caught the interest of the
public, spurred on by the mounting U.S. debt
burden, the recession of the early 21st
century, and the large demographic shifts
that have been underway for several decades.
The new brief demonstrates that, under the
current system, some women fare better than
others. Virginia P. Reno of the National
Academy of Social Insurance introduces
readers to Social Security finances and the
adequacy of benefits going forward.
Next, Joan Entmacher of the National Women’s
Law Center makes the argument that improving
Social Security widow benefits is a feasible
and important strategy for reducing poverty.
Finally, in a piece that challenges some
commonly held assumptions, Rix addresses the
needs of caregivers.
The brief is the third and final component
of a grant partnership between GSA and the
Retirement Research Foundation. The first
was a pre-conference workshop, “Women’s
Health and Retirement Security: How Far We
Have Come and Where We Need To Go,”
organized by GSA at its 2008 Annual
Scientific Meeting.
The second was a special issue of The
National Academy on an Aging Society’s
quarterly Public
Policy & Aging Report (Volume
19, Number 2), which examined findings from
the pre-conference workshop.
“For Millions of Older Women, Social
Security Is a Lifeline” can be purchased
from www.geron.org/bookstore.
Reporters may request electronic review
copies.
###
The National
Academy on an Aging Society is
the policy institute of The
Gerontological Society of America,
the nation's oldest and largest
interdisciplinary organization devoted to
research, education, and practice in the
field of aging. The principal mission of the
Society — and its 5,200+ members — is to
advance the study of aging and disseminate
information among scientists, decision
makers, and the general public.