British women face gender pension gap at all stages of their career

-

New research has found that at all stages of their career, British women face a gender pension gap that rapidly grows with age.

Data from Legal & General (L&G) pension scheme members shows that women have lower pension pot sizes in all age brackets, with the situation dramatically deteriorating as they approach retirement.

At the beginning of a woman’s career, the gender pension gap is at 17 percent, but this rises to a staggering 56 percent at retirement compared to men.

This is even the case in female-dominated industries, with the pension gap remaining just as stark.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

The research found that in the Senior Care sector, well over three quarters (85 percent) of pension scheme members are women, but the average woman’s pot size is around half (47 percent) the size of the average man’s.

L&G also analysed the size of pension pots of more than 37,000 people who retired in 2020.

Whilst the average size of a woman’s pension pot is £10,000, men’s is more than double, at £21,000.

This comes after a report cited by the BBC in 2018 found that women faced an 11 per cent smaller pension pot than their male counterparts by the time they retired, which was attributed to motherhood and caring obligations.

Speaking about addressing the pay and pension gap, Stuart Murphy, Co-Head of DC at Legal & General Investment Management says:

The gender pay and pension gap is a complex issue that will take time to solve.

We need to see increased support from the state and employers in levelling the playing field by looking at issues such as lowering the eligibility age and raising the minimum contributions for auto-enrolment, as well as addressing the pay gap for part time employees

Alongside this, Rita Butler Jones, Co-Head of DC at Legal & General Investment Management commented:

Much like the Gender Pay Gap in wages, the Gender Pension Gap is fast becoming an issue which needs to be higher on our radars as an industry.

This analysis of more than 4 million of our members reveals the extent of the gender pension gap in the UK – a gap that exists right from the very beginning of a woman’s career and accelerates as she approaches retirement.


*The analysis is based on LGIM’s proprietary data on c4 million defined contribution members as at 6 April 2021

Megan McElroy is a second year English Literature student at the University of Warwick. As Editorial Intern for HRreview, her interests include employment law and public policy. In relation to her degree, her favourite areas of study include Small Press Publishing and political poetry.

Latest news

England’s overnight World Cup clash and 5am pub opening prompt CIPD advice

The CIPD is urging organisations to agree any flexibility before England's 1am World Cup last-16 tie to help minimise disruption at the start of the working week.

Russell Cowley: Gen Z – rebuilding workplace culture, break by break

Gen Z workers are taking proper breaks and in doing so, they may be fixing something the rest of us broke.

Fit for Work: Weekend warrior? You can still reap the health benefits

Weekend exercise can still improve long-term health, even for people who struggle to fit physical activity into the working week.

Superdry co-founder’s victim warns workplace power can silence abuse victims

A survivor's account raises questions about speaking-up cultures and accountability in organisations.
- Advertisement -

UK’s always-on work culture ‘driving employee burnout’

Nearly half of UK workers say they end most working days mentally exhausted as rising workplace pressure leaves employees and managers struggling to switch off.

Andrew Murray on why no two days look alike

A people development leader shares how travel, training and a passion for helping others shape a working day with little room for routine.

Must read

Gary Cattermole: How to engage UK employees

Employee research (such as employee engagement surveys, focus groups...

Richard Prime: 2013 – a great year for business

Last year was a great year for start-ups: the...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you