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Income Fragility

Employment Histories and Pension Incomes in Europe

A multilevel analysis of the role of institutional factors

Pages 3-26
Published online: 10 Jul 2014
 
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In research on pensions and retirement income, it has been frequently reasoned that the economic situation in later life is determined by an interplay of individual and institutional factors. However, previous studies in this field either focus only on individual determinants or on macro-level outcomes using aggregated data. We apply a multilevel approach to examine the impact of institutional factors on the link of individual pension income and previous employment history. The underlying research question is of how national pension systems shape this relationship; whether flexible careers and atypical employment are compensated for or, on the contrary, ‘penalised’ with a low pension income. We combine the life-history data of individuals in 13 European countries from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARELIFE) with macro-data on national pension systems. While we find little cross-national variation for men, for women the strength of the relationship of employment history and pension income differs between countries and is significantly moderated by factors related to the pension system.

Additional information

Author information

Katja Möhring

Katja Möhring is Research Fellow at the Centre for Social Policy Research at the University of Bremen. She has worked at the Department of Social Policy at the University of Cologne and the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) in Berlin. Her research interests are welfare state and social policy analyses, life course sociology, statistical methods and social inequality.

Funding

I received financial support from Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [grant number GRK1461].
 

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