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Pensioners on International Women's Day, London 2002 Article for the Greater London Pensioners Association, December 2000 Brazil: 'Monthly Lifelong Income' for older people, whether or not they paid contributions... As pensioners, weve put in our time. Weve raised kids and kept house. Also weve served our husbands, dinner and sex, for decades. If that were not enough, weve also gone out, not with any great career in mind, but for waged work to help meet expenses. Weve suffered low wages and bad working conditions. Now we want to have some free time for ourselves. Weve had enough of child-care and cooking the family dinner, cleaning up other peoples messes. For most of our work in the past we got no wage, but we dont want to repeat that experience as grannies. We want a decent pension, whether we paid into a scheme or not. We want reliable medical care. We want safe, convenient and free public transport. Like other women we want a social life with our peers. In other words, we want to change the world. Thats why well be joining the Global Womens Strike on 8 March. A grandmother from the US now living in London, England
Pensioners do not reflect the contribution women make and have made throughout our lives to the economy and the community in unwaged and waged work. This is why so many of us are on income support. Women never retire but sometimes we get very tired; with the continuing work and tired of being undervalued. There is a proposal to pay grandmothers to care for grandchildren when their mothers work outside the home. Many of us are doing this already and feel we have no choice because of the lack of affordable, quality childcare. Women who are in low waged jobs can pay their mothers the rate for the jobs. Some cant pay anything. If we were paid by the government, some of us would welcome it, but its unlikely that wed get a fair rate. Many of us do not live near our families and couldnt do this work anyway but we are entitled to enjoy some time with our grandchildren. This often means looking after them in school holidays which can be too much for some of us. We are also entitled to some fun with our partners and/or friends. Most of us have pensions which barely cover necessities let alone participating in leisure activities or visiting our grandchildren. When our daughters are paid for their caring work and our pensions are increased to acknowledge our past and present contribution to our communities, we can negotiate childcare arrangements from a position of mutual financial independence. After the death of my husband l received a pension based on my husbands contributions. A new law due to come into effect in April 2000 will cut this pension right for women by 50%. This was not widely publicised. It wont affect my pension but l want other women to know about it and for the law to be scrapped. I separated from my husband some time before he died and when he retired l did not get a share of his good pension. I was entitled though, after all he worked long hours but was only able to because l worked even longer hours looking after him and our children, cooking, cleaning, maintaining him with sex work, emotional work to enable him to keep going. Im still supporting my daughters, emotionally and practically as they juggle work at home and in their jobs. I dont want to be paid and so feel pressured to do child care regularly. Id rather my daughters are paid so that they and l can choose. I want to be paid in my own right for a lifetime of continuing work. A grandmother from Hyde, nr Manchester, England All Women Count: Older Women more information |