Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research

To illustrate the potential use of plural research methods, two studies of Australian women's retirement incomes are examined. The first study employed quantitative microsimulation techniques. Its outcomes emphasised low lifetime earnings as a cause of women's lower retirement incomes. The...

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Main Author: Jefferson, Therese
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34792
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author Jefferson, Therese
author_facet Jefferson, Therese
author_sort Jefferson, Therese
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description To illustrate the potential use of plural research methods, two studies of Australian women's retirement incomes are examined. The first study employed quantitative microsimulation techniques. Its outcomes emphasised low lifetime earnings as a cause of women's lower retirement incomes. The second study used an inductive approach known as grounded theory, and its conclusions emphasised household decision-making processes as a cause of both women's low lifetime earnings and lower retirement incomes. Using Runde's criteria for assessing causal explanations, a comparison is made of the outcomes of the two studies. The conclusion is that, rather than being seen as competing accounts, the outcomes of the two varying research methods can be viewed as complementary. By demonstrating the different insights afforded by contrasting research methods, this paper provides some support for pluralism of research methods within the discipline of economics.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-347922019-02-19T05:35:35Z Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research Jefferson, Therese Critical realism Pluralism Babylonian method Retirement income Research method Grounded theory To illustrate the potential use of plural research methods, two studies of Australian women's retirement incomes are examined. The first study employed quantitative microsimulation techniques. Its outcomes emphasised low lifetime earnings as a cause of women's lower retirement incomes. The second study used an inductive approach known as grounded theory, and its conclusions emphasised household decision-making processes as a cause of both women's low lifetime earnings and lower retirement incomes. Using Runde's criteria for assessing causal explanations, a comparison is made of the outcomes of the two studies. The conclusion is that, rather than being seen as competing accounts, the outcomes of the two varying research methods can be viewed as complementary. By demonstrating the different insights afforded by contrasting research methods, this paper provides some support for pluralism of research methods within the discipline of economics. 2006 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34792 10.1093/cje/bel034 Oxford University Press restricted
spellingShingle Critical realism Pluralism Babylonian method Retirement income Research method Grounded theory
Jefferson, Therese
Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title_full Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title_fullStr Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title_full_unstemmed Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title_short Two studies of women's retirement incomes in Australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
title_sort two studies of women's retirement incomes in australia: assessing some outcomes of pluralism in economic research
topic Critical realism Pluralism Babylonian method Retirement income Research method Grounded theory
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/34792