Women separating risk poverty in old age to retain family home

Women separating are foregoing their share of pension schemes to secure the family home, new research has found. Researchers at the University of Glasgow and the University of Edinburgh found that parties with private pensions were reluctant to disclose the value of their pension/s or to include these in the division of property, following a separation. In s with couples who had entered into settlement agreements, a recurrent theme was women being determined to stay in the family home. For men, pensions were the key asset they wanted to keep. Pensions can be a major component of a couple's assets but while they were mentioned in 57% of the research sample, pension sharing was agreed in only 11%. "Pension sharing is much discussed, but seldom agreed," said Dr Jane Mair, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Glasgow. "In s, 25% of women reported being worse off financially, while all men but one reported their financial situation was either the same or better than when they were married." All Settled? A study of legally binding separation agreements and private ordering in Scotland is published by the Centre for Research on Families and Relationships (www.crfr.ac.uk) The last piece of research into out of court written agreements in Scotland was conducted in 1992.
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