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Contractual arrangements and the retirement intentions of women in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 10:51 authored by Philip Taylor, Catherine EarlCatherine Earl, Christopher McLoughlin
Older women represent an increasing proportion of Australia's paid labour force. Lacking is an understanding of how the nature of the contractual arrangement between worker and employer is associated with women's retirement intentions.Utilising data from a national survey of older women and employment, regression analysis is reported that tests the association between contractual arrangements and other meso level factors on the number of years until respondents' intended retirement. Taking a range of factors into account, it is found that those in casual employment anticipate retiring later than those with other employment arrangements. It is argued that, firstly, there is definitional ambiguity about flexible working that renders present calls for its promotion for older workers potentially problematical; secondly, policy continues to focus on an androcentric norm which presents risks for women in negotiating retirement; and, thirdly, a pro-work agenda for older people needs to have job quality as a core value.

Funding

Retiring women: Understanding older female work-life transitions

Australian Research Council

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Journal

Australian Journal of Labour Economics

Volume

19

Issue

3

Start page

175

End page

195

Total pages

21

Publisher

Centre for Labour Market Research

Place published

Bently, WA, Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Curtin University of Technology

Former Identifier

2006096241

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-12-17

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