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Married women face little or no State pension
Millions of married women are facing retirement without the state
pension or other key benefits, according to the Liberal Democrats.
The Liberal Democrats said the problem affects up to 4.5 million
women who have paid 'reduced rate' National Insurance (NI)
contributions.
And they are calling on the government to act urgently to help the
women to secure a reasonable pension. When National Insurance
was introduced in 1948 married women were allowed to pay a reduced
rate.
Although reduced rate contributions were abolished for women who first
started contributing after April 1977, those who began contributing
before that date were allowed to continue paying a reduced rate.
Now many women paying the reduced rate are approaching retirement.
Reduced rate payers lose entitlement to the state pension, jobseeker's
allowance and sickness benefit. "Women are paying pension
contributions for over thirty years but receiving nothing in return."
said Steven Webb, Liberal Democrat Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary.
He said that women on reduced rates had contributed £8bn ($12.5bn)
into National Insurance coffers for which their only entitlements were
industrial injuries benefit and maternity allowance.
7 pence per week pension
Mr Webb said this was the government equivalent of pension
'mis-selling',
particularly as many women were not aware of what benefits they would
miss when they chose the reduced rate.
"When this happens in the private sector companies are forced to pay
out compensation," added Mr Webb.
In one case highlighted by the Lib Dems, a reduced rate payer found
that after 33 years of working for the NHS her contributions secured a
state pension of just 7 pence a week.
Mr Webb called for urgent action in response to the pension crisis. He
said women on reduced rates should be informed of the shortfall and
offered the chance to buy back missing years of their contribution
record in order to secure a pension.
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