Written answers

Thursday, 14 February 2008

Department of Social and Family Affairs

Pension Provisions

5:00 pm

Photo of Michael RingMichael Ring (Mayo, Fine Gael)
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Question 136: To ask the Minister for Social and Family Affairs his proposals to provide a pension for women who were debarred from continuing work in the Civil Service from the 1960s to the 1980s on marrying; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [5775/08]

Photo of Martin CullenMartin Cullen (Waterford, Fianna Fail)
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The Government is anxious to ensure that as many people as possible can be accommodated within the social welfare pensions system, with due regard being paid to the contributory principle underlying entitlement to contributory payments and, in the case of non-contributory payments, the need to ensure that resources are directed to those who are most in need. Over the last 10 years, means tests have been improved and qualifying conditions for contributory payments made easier. Many women in both the private and the public sector left employment on marriage because they were required to, or because that was the societal norm at the time. Civil servants who left the workforce through the operation of the marriage bar were not insured for social welfare pension purposes. Accordingly, the loss of pension rights in their case relates more to their occupational position rather than social welfare pension entitlements.

That said, the Green Paper on Pensions which I published on 17th October includes a full discussion on the social welfare pension position of women who had to resign due to the marriage bar. In this context, the Green Paper sets out a range of reforms including the use of universal entitlements and back-dating the homemakers scheme. A consultation process on the Green Paper is now underway and will remain open until mid 2008. The Government will respond to the process by publishing a framework for future pensions policy and I expect that this will happen towards the end of the year. Decisions in relation to those who are not at present receiving support through the social welfare system, including those who had to leave employment on marriage, will be considered in that context.

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