Authors: Janet C. Gornick, Eve Sierminska, and Timothy M. Smeeding

Publication: The Journals of Gerontology: Social Sciences. vol. 64B, no. 3. pp. 402-414

Date: May 2009

Abstract: 

Objectives:

We assess the income and wealth packages of older women’s (age 65+ years) households and the extent to which low income is paired with low wealth, across a group of six high-income countries.

Methods:

We use data on income and net worth from the Luxembourg Wealth Study, a new cross-national microdatabase. We define income poverty as having household income less than 50% of the national median and asset poverty as holding financial assets equivalent to less than 6 months of income at the poverty threshold.

Results:

Older women typically have less income than do members of younger households at the national median, but their wealth holdings are generally much higher than their country’s median wealth holdings. Older women’s households in the United States report the highest net worth across these countries, in part because older American women have comparatively high rates of homeownership. However, American older women are also substantially more likely to be income poor. They also report high levels of asset poverty, as do women across all our comparison countries, with Sweden as a partial exception.

Discussion:

Further research is needed to identify the most vulnerable subgroups, to integrate analyses of necessary expenditures, and to assess policy implications.

Link: The Income and Wealth Packages of Older Women in Cross-National Perspective (PDF)