What’s Your Pension Story? Women’s Perspectives during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Their Old-Age Pension Status, Past and Present
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Genderedness of Old-Age Vulnerability
2.2. Divorce, Widowhood, and Mothers’ Vulnerability
2.3. Vulnerability in the Wake of the COVID-19 Pandemic
2.4. Economic Abuse: IPV (Intimate Partner Violence) against Women
2.5. The Israeli Case
3. Method
4. Findings
4.1. Economic Abuse: An Unequal Distribution of Pension Funds upon Divorce
“We were married for about twenty years, and we have four children, but when he realized I wanted to move forward with the divorce, he activated all possible concealment tactics: said the property was mortgaged and we had bank debt, hid the information on his pension funds. Luckily I did a comprehensive study of all our assets and money before I set out on the divorce path. But I believed him about the pension funds and didn’t check on them.”(Natasha, works as a laboratory worker, divorced, 59 years of age, and has four children).
“He wouldn’t give a divorce, he didn’t, he wouldn’t give me, he wouldn’t give me. Look, all the time he whined, “I don’t have, I don’t have, I don’t have.” I don’t believe him, I don’t believe him. Because I did all the expenses, all the expenses [of the household]. Although he paid a little but […] I, with my poor salary, managed to do so many things. And he received huge compensation [which is part of the pension fund] from his workplace. He worked at […], it’s a lucrative place.”(Ora, works for an NGO that runs clubs for the elderly, divorced, 67, and has four children).
4.2. Regrets over Past Choices
“I was young, in my early forties, and I said to myself, “I pretty much do not have the strength for struggles; I’ll manage. I have many more years of work to fix it.” Today I realize that was a mistake. It can’t be corrected. And it hurts, that you can’t grow old in peace.”
“Now, retroactively you can’t fix it, and it’s unfortunate that you can’t give your children financial help as you would like because when you were young, you sacrificed. I don’t have to tell you how costly it is to live in Israel and how expensive housing is.”
“It’s really not enough. 4000 shekels [~$1090; her salary] plus 2100 shekels [~$572; old-age pension] is 6100 shekels. It’s not enough to live on. Not to mention helping kids or something, absolutely not.Q. I see that this point of helping your children is terribly painful for you?A. Yes, definitely, because I grew up with middle-class parents. In those times the middle class could very much support their kids, and my parents supported me a lot. I mean, we bought an apartment with a mortgage but they gave us an amount. And every time we were in a less favorable financial situation during the marriage they always helped. I mean, I’ve very much aware of parental help. […] Obviously, I would be happy if I could help them [her kids] with that.”(Alma, caregiver working through an employment agency, divorced, 72 years of age, and has two children).
4.3. COVID-19 and Pensions
“During the [height of] COVID, it was quite difficult for me.… For a large part of my work, customers had to make changes. There were several months without work. If I did [work] for one of my big clients—they were doing ceremonies…they had to cancel them and adapt them to online [ceremonies]. … Some clients even closed and stopped working…”
“Women from age 62 can take their pension allowance, [or] they can postpone it for up to five years and earn five percent more for each year. Okay, I [chose to retire] because I’d just finished [teaching] twelfth graders and it suited me [to leave my position] at 64. I could have continued until 67.”(Zohar, works as a teacher, divorced and remarried, 64 years of age, and has three children).
“The new principal for the last three years didn’t suit me…. I felt that if I continued it was already starting to cost me my health…. COVID made things even more extreme. I said [to myself] “come on, I’ve had enough!” Even so, towards the age of 60, I started all these reflections on how, what, when I’ll retired. So, I said I will finish [teaching] my twelfth-grade class and that’s it, that’s enough. …I’m still working, but elsewhere, only half-time, so that I have additional income to add to my pension allowance.”
“I’m unemployed. I really need to go to the labor office [to look for other work]. I haven’t gone until now because I. every time they canceled due to COVID. But I have to go now. I have to say that I’ve been receiving unemployment benefits, for the first time in my life, for a year and a half. … True, I didn’t get as much income as I normally do. But I have to say that it came in like clockwork every month for a year and a half…. I know many of my friends fell through the cracks and didn’t get anything, but I did. My daughter fell through the cracks because she was self-employed and finished her [last] job right before COVID, so she didn’t get anything.”(Liliana, currently an unemployed tour guide, married, 63 years of age, and has two children).
“Now, my husband and I have a pension. It’s not big, even though I worked in a lot of places, but like some […] kibbutznik, excuse the expression, I never thought about a pension at all, I didn’t think about taking care of all these things. Our insurance agent, who started seeing it, said “Tell me, what is this? I need to arrange some 19 jobs for you, start building for you.” Never mind, a mess. But I didn’t think about it at all and I didn’t see it. And now it’s very important for me to have some kind of income if I want to buy anything for my grandchildren…”(Maris, a retired psychologist and part-time freelance cook, married, 68 years of age, and has three children).
“I decided that I will post here, on the local Facebook, that I know how to cook well, and [ask] if families want me to come and cook for them. Two families responded. [In one family, they said] “The children are going to school, we want you to prepare food, on Wednesday they will return at noon from school, we want Is….” And it will be now, it’s all new. This is the first time. I didn’t sleep because I was stressed [hoping] that everything would be okay, and whether I would finish everything, whether it would taste good, and whether they’d be satisfied….”
4.4. The State’s Responsibility for Old-Age Economic Security
“The bottom line is that I have no [employment] pension. Because I took some of the benefits when I was fired. I had to resign from Dan [the bus company] because I could no longer continue working due to physical restrictions. I went on unemployment, but I also took worker’s compensation [funds which are part of the pension allowance base] and other benefits. But I didn’t save for retirement. I spent my pension. Not that there was much, but regardless, I spent it. I’ve worked for forty years and contributed added value to what I do. So why don’t I Ierve it…why does the so-called state hold me back? I say again that the bottom line of what I said before is that the state should ensure my pension; it shouldn’t fall on me to make sure it happens.”(Yaela, currently unemployed, divorced, 63 years of age, and mother of one).
“I have no pension [laughs]. It’s not so simple then. I mean, my pension…what I managed in places where I was a salaried employee [most of the years she was self-employed] here and there will give me a employment pension of 150 shekels [~$41] a month. So I have no employment pension […]. That’s wrong. So it’s not that I felt I had to chose a different line of work, but rather that the state is wrong: That’s not how they should operate; it’s not right. Loads of people are thrown out [of the system]. I don’t think there’s anyone in the film industry [where she worked in the past] who is set up for retirement. Maybe someone who’s reached the top and has too much money. The film industry in Israel does not earn that much money. So that’s it. And even now, as I talk to you, I don’t feel like I should’ve behaved differently and arranged a pension for myself. I’m not succeeding [now] because I fought to have enough food that month. So pension: who thought of that at all?”(Sima, works as a freelancer in knowledge management, widow, 63 years of age, and has one child).
“Most self-employed have never learned to manage their budget, manage their cash flow. So the same, they also don’t manage their future pension. So the matter of the patronage of the state is necessary because these people are not thinking about their future.”(Maya, works as a self-employed business consultant, married, 60 years of age, and has three children).
“I think that, really in these cases where the salary is so low, the state should contribute the [employee’s] part [of pension savings]. The employer must contribute his part, it’s mandatory, […] but the employee’s part the state should see to.”
4.5. Knowledge Is Important and I Can Help Others
“So [my father] used to say: “Daughter [laughs], it’s very important that you always have a pension fund. Savings and finances do not matter. This pension fund is important. You need to have an amount that goes into your account every month.” And, of course, I also studied the issue in my work and also worked with agents, etc. I realized he was right. I also started talking to whoever I could and with employees in particular, explaining the importance of this matter. That it is very important to have not only a capital amount but also an annuity that we will receive in the future. When it was not yet mandatory, it was before the so-called mandatory pension.”
“I tried to instill in people that it’s important to have some minimum amount that will go into their bank account every month, that it will not depend on anything, and that it can give them some kind of security even in old age.”
“They need to be given a course like this at university, like a mandatory course, […] or in the workplace, workplaces should provide such a course. It’s for the employee’s wellbeing, really. This is an ongoing course. When I was with my husband on a retirement course, I said to him, “Wow, why didn’t they give this to me ten years ago, twenty years ago, why now?” I mean, what am I going to do with [this information] now? Okay, let’s take a risk, but how much will it help me right now? I don’t have thirty years now [to accumulate savings]…. There are loads and loads of financial tools today that people are not aware of, really. And acquiring them as soon as they retire is too late […] So we need to give these skills to women […]. So one has to give these skills in school as well.”(Anna, currently self-employed in international marketing, married, 64 years of age, and has three children).
“I think there are a great many women, probably my age […] but not only—but also younger people—who don’t exactly understand what it means to have a pension and its implications. Whenever people come here [to her accounting office] and I sometimes hear what kind of economic steps they want to take, I always stop them and say: “Wait a second, stop. Does this make sense?” It’s not that you have money here and now you’re on top of the world. It has to do with doing something with that money. It needs to support you. I always shamelessly give the example of my mother and my father. Just a month ago, my mother sold her apartment. It’s shocking to me that an elderly person has to sell her home in order to survive…and I’m amazed over and over how it still is… young people who are drowning in material possessions and employees who still don’t understand what it means to need money at an older age. […] I’m here doing what I can, but yes, I’d like there to be more explanation of what this thing called pension means. Not everyone understands it.”(Galia, works as a payroll accountant, divorced, 60 years of age, and has four children).
“While employees were signing employment agreements, I also checked their pension amounts and discovered that everyone, from senior vice president to cleaner, has the same pension plan insurance, where 28 percent goes to risk [insurance in case of death] and 72 percent goes to the pension. Intuitively, I said to myself this can’t be, it doesn’t make sense that different people with different marital statuses, different ages, different occupations and different incomes would have the same insurance. A lot of money is going into risk insurance. […] And since then, we really sat down, worker by worker, and I learned a lot and adapted plans for each worker. […] We need to understand, we need to check the matter of retirement savings every so often or whenever there’s a change in family or income status.”(Miri, retired, married, 67 years of age, and has two children).
5. Discussion
Research Limitations and Practical Recommendations
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Up to Age 80 | From Age 80 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Base rate (there is a seniority increment of 2% for every year the National Insurance tax was paid, up to 50%; and a pension deferral increment of 5% for every year after retirement age that receipt of the allowance was deferred, up to 25%.) | 1596 NIS ($435) (The exchange rate is calculated according to $1 = 3.67 NIS.) | 1686 NIS ($459) | |
Up to age 70 | Ages 70–79 | From age 80 | |
With income support supplement | 3799 NIS ($1035) | 3836 NIS ($1045) | 3873 NIS ($1055) |
Variables | N | % |
---|---|---|
Employment status | ||
Employed | 22 | 71.0 |
Retired (or semi-retired) | 9 | 29.0 |
Occupation (now and before retirement) | ||
Administrator | 6 | 19.3 |
Education | 4 | 12.9 |
Human resource manager | 3 | 9.6 |
Therapist | 5 | 16.1 |
Architecture and design | 2 | 6.4 |
Finance management | 2 | 6.4 |
Other (tour guide, director, library scientist, and dentist) | 9 | 29.0 |
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Herbst-Debby, A. What’s Your Pension Story? Women’s Perspectives during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Their Old-Age Pension Status, Past and Present. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 5912. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20105912
Herbst-Debby A. What’s Your Pension Story? Women’s Perspectives during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Their Old-Age Pension Status, Past and Present. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(10):5912. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20105912
Chicago/Turabian StyleHerbst-Debby, Anat. 2023. "What’s Your Pension Story? Women’s Perspectives during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Their Old-Age Pension Status, Past and Present" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 10: 5912. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20105912
APA StyleHerbst-Debby, A. (2023). What’s Your Pension Story? Women’s Perspectives during the COVID-19 Pandemic on Their Old-Age Pension Status, Past and Present. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(10), 5912. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20105912