wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/b7159355c535be691f47916e902df83a-granell-perez-rafae/info.yaml

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abstract: 'This study analyses, from the perspective of public economics, the
Demographic Supplement for Motherhood (CDM) introduced in the Spanish
Social Security System in 2016. This measure is a supplement added to
the contributory pension received on retirement, widowhood or disability
for women who began to receive a pension and who have had two or more
children. It was introduced with two objectives in mind: to reduce the
gender gap in pensions and to socially recognise the contribution of
motherhood to the pension system.
In this paper, a socioeconomic analysis of this measure is carried out.
The objectives and issues of this measure are reviewed and its
distributional effects are analysed. The main source of information are
data provided by the Ministry of Employment and Social Security, in
particular the Continuous Sample of Working History (MCVL).
This is a new approach, with the focus being on public economics rather
than on legal aspects and use of the MCVL data which, for the first
time, includes measurements related to the CDM.
The main objectives of this study are: 1) to estimate the impact that
the CDM has had on the pension system during the first year of
application; 2) to analyse the differences in treatment it generates;
and, 3) to assess its distributional effects on the gender gap in
pensions and on inequality among women. The study finishes with an
analysis of other equality policies and puts forward the main
conclusions reached and proposals for alternative measures.
The results show that the CDM has affected 58.4\% of new female
pensioners. The women who have benefitted most from this measure are
those who receive a widow''s pension (50.9\%), followed by retirement
pension (39.8\%) and disability pension (9.2\%). Their sociodemographic
characteristics show that 53.4\% of the supplement is paid to mothers
with 2 children, while women not receiving CDM tend to have higher
educational levels than those who are in receipt of the supplement. It
also shows that self-employed workers tend to have more than one child
and, therefore, receive the CDM in a greater proportion (62.5\%) than
employed workers (57.5\%). The estimated cost of this measure amounted
to 64 million euros in 2016 (approximately 0.05\% of the expenditure on
contributory pensions), a figure that will increase considerably as the
supplement is extended to future female pensioners.
Among the main criticisms highlighted by this study is the difference in
treatment this measure generates. It purports to be a measure which
acknowledges the value of motherhood yet it discriminates against many
mothers by excluding women who were pensioners before 2016 and who are
the most affected, historically, by more unfavourable family and work
structures. In addition, other categories excluded are mothers with only
one child, women who took voluntary retirement, women who receive
non-contributory pensions and women who do not receive any pension.
Finally, the measure works against the principle of equality between men
and women, promulgated by the European Union, because it discriminates
against fathers.
Another criticism is that the amount of the CDM increases as the pension
rises and continues to be paid even when the maximum pension is reached.
This means that those women with higher pensions benefit more from the
supplement, which is contrary to measures applied in other countries.
One suggestion to improve the equality of this measure is that the
supplement should have an upper limit.
Furthermore, its effect on reducing inequality has been insignificant.
As a measure of equality between men and women, the CDM has reduced the
gender gap between new pensioners (2.2\%) but its effect on the whole
system is very poor (0.22\%). The pension gap between men and women in
Spain is still very wide at a rate of 29.3\% and much more work needs to
be done to reduce this gap.
Finally, a pension system that gives women greater rights for raising
children can reinforce traditional roles, discouraging mothers from
entering the formal labour market and fathers from taking a break from
their professional careers. This is why these measures are being
questioned by the Court of Justice of the European Union in terms of
equal treatment between mothers and fathers.
The CDM does not address the causes of the problem of gender
discrimination. It does not address discrimination in employment nor
does it offer the support required in the workplace for reconciling
maternity and paternity leave. It is ineffective as a stimulus to change
labour behaviour of women because its effect is in the long term and it
is an outdated measure that can be counterproductive.
In light of these problems, the priority for the government would be to
establish authentic equality policies which create opportunities for
both men and women to develop their full potential. 1) labour market
policies that eliminate gender differences (access to employment, wages
and job promotion at work), improving the flexibility and the rationale
of the working day, and 2) reconciliation policies related to family and
work life, aimed at all workers, that recognise fathers and mothers as
having co-responsibility for childcare.
The following measures are proposed to reduce the gender gap in
pensions:
a) Replace the current CDM with an additional contribution period per
child or a fixed amount supplement, in recognition of the period of time
dedicated to bringing up children.
If contribution years were added for accessing the pension, the number
of women with contributory pensions would increase. To avoid the same
negative aspects already highlighted, it should be implemented in a way
that covers all kind of pensions and gives greater support to mothers of
children with disabilities.
b) Improve non-contributory (universal) pensions, which are those of
lesser value. This measure would increase the number of women with
pensions in their own right, thereby reducing the coverage gap and the
pension gap of the total population (including non-pensioners). This
extension is vital to stop the pension system being a welfare system
(low coverage) and being outdated and out of touch (excessively linked
to family relationships).
Our further studies will be centred on these proposals with data
provided by the MCVL in future years.'
affiliation: 'Perez, RG (Corresponding Author), Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.
Granell Perez, Rafael; Salvador Cifre, Concha, Univ Valencia, Valencia, Spain.'
author: Granell Perez, Rafael and Salvador Cifre, Concha
author-email: 'Rafael.Granell@uv.es
Concha.Salvador@uv.es'
author_list:
- family: Granell Perez
given: Rafael
- family: Salvador Cifre
given: Concha
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.7203/CIRIEC-E.98.13570
eissn: 1989-6816
files: []
issn: 0213-8093
journal: CIRIEC-ESPANA REVISTA DE ECONOMIA PUBLICA SOCIAL Y COOPERATIVA
keywords: Social Security; pensions; gender gap; inequality
language: Spanish
month: MAR
number-of-cited-references: '36'
orcid-numbers: Granell, Rafael/0000-0002-9040-2382
pages: 287-322
papis_id: 609189e1796088545e1ea76058fa5346
ref: Granellperez2020demographicsupplemen
researcherid-numbers: Granell, Rafael/K-9704-2017
times-cited: '0'
title: Demographic supplement for motherhood within the framework of equality policies.
Analysis of objectives, results and outcomes
type: Article
unique-id: WOS:000523362600010
usage-count-last-180-days: '2'
usage-count-since-2013: '8'
volume: '98'
web-of-science-categories: Economics
year: '2020'