Security in old age for older single women without children

Australia's population is ageing. Women are much more likely than men to live in poverty in old age, especially single women (AHRC, 2010). Improving the economic security of single older women is a policy priority. It is also an important objective for financial advisors. Most research into the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hamilton, Myra, Hodgson, Helen, Bradbury, Bruce, Ip, Mary, Adamson, Elizabeth, van Toorn, Georgia
Format: Report
Published: University of Sydney 2020
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81897
_version_ 1848764441764560896
author Hamilton, Myra
Hodgson, Helen
Bradbury, Bruce
Ip, Mary
Adamson, Elizabeth
van Toorn, Georgia
author_facet Hamilton, Myra
Hodgson, Helen
Bradbury, Bruce
Ip, Mary
Adamson, Elizabeth
van Toorn, Georgia
author_sort Hamilton, Myra
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Australia's population is ageing. Women are much more likely than men to live in poverty in old age, especially single women (AHRC, 2010). Improving the economic security of single older women is a policy priority. It is also an important objective for financial advisors. Most research into the reasons behind single older women’s economic insecurity focuses on the ‘motherhood penalty’: the effects of having and rearing children on labour market participation, incomes and retirement incomes. In Australia, however, 16 per cent of women do not have children (Koropeckyj-Cox & Call 2007) and this proportion is growing. Little is known about older single women who do not have children, including how they are faring leading up to and after retirement and to what extent, when children are removed from the equation, gender inequalities persist. This report presents the results of new research, providing a detailed picture of what shapes the financial security and wellbeing of older single women without children (whom for the purposes of this project we will call older SWWC). Funded by CPA Australia, the research asks: How are older SWWC faring in employment, superannuation, housing and aged care? How does this compare with other gender and relationship groups? How can public policies support SWWC to obtain financial security in later life? How can accountants/financial advisors support SWWC to navigate these systems? To answer these questions, the report draws on a review of national legislation, analysis of Australia’s Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey, an online community with 45 older SWWC, and interviews with 10 financial stakeholders (i.e. financial advisors and housing specialists). Findings will inform policy and practice of governments and the financial services sector.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:19:25Z
format Report
id curtin-20.500.11937-81897
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:19:25Z
publishDate 2020
publisher University of Sydney
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-818972022-10-06T07:43:55Z Security in old age for older single women without children Hamilton, Myra Hodgson, Helen Bradbury, Bruce Ip, Mary Adamson, Elizabeth van Toorn, Georgia Australia's population is ageing. Women are much more likely than men to live in poverty in old age, especially single women (AHRC, 2010). Improving the economic security of single older women is a policy priority. It is also an important objective for financial advisors. Most research into the reasons behind single older women’s economic insecurity focuses on the ‘motherhood penalty’: the effects of having and rearing children on labour market participation, incomes and retirement incomes. In Australia, however, 16 per cent of women do not have children (Koropeckyj-Cox & Call 2007) and this proportion is growing. Little is known about older single women who do not have children, including how they are faring leading up to and after retirement and to what extent, when children are removed from the equation, gender inequalities persist. This report presents the results of new research, providing a detailed picture of what shapes the financial security and wellbeing of older single women without children (whom for the purposes of this project we will call older SWWC). Funded by CPA Australia, the research asks: How are older SWWC faring in employment, superannuation, housing and aged care? How does this compare with other gender and relationship groups? How can public policies support SWWC to obtain financial security in later life? How can accountants/financial advisors support SWWC to navigate these systems? To answer these questions, the report draws on a review of national legislation, analysis of Australia’s Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey, an online community with 45 older SWWC, and interviews with 10 financial stakeholders (i.e. financial advisors and housing specialists). Findings will inform policy and practice of governments and the financial services sector. 2020 Report http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81897 University of Sydney fulltext
spellingShingle Hamilton, Myra
Hodgson, Helen
Bradbury, Bruce
Ip, Mary
Adamson, Elizabeth
van Toorn, Georgia
Security in old age for older single women without children
title Security in old age for older single women without children
title_full Security in old age for older single women without children
title_fullStr Security in old age for older single women without children
title_full_unstemmed Security in old age for older single women without children
title_short Security in old age for older single women without children
title_sort security in old age for older single women without children
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/81897