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Attitudes to Pensions*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2009

Extract

One in six of the population is an old-age pensioner and everyone has the prospect of becoming one in their time. It is therefore unsurprising that pensions have been a subject of much political debate. There has, however, been little investigation of what people think about pensions. Politicians have tended to declare that pensions are too low but have in practice been constrained in raising them by their conception of the willingness, or unwillingness, of the working population to pay for higher pensions.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1974

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References

1 Electoral Registration for Parliamentary Elections, Gray, P. G. and Gee, F. A., Government Social Survey, London: Report No. 391.Google Scholar

2 Registrar General's Statistical Review of England and Wales, 1971, Part I, Office of Population Censuses and Surveys, London: HMSO, 1973.Google Scholar

3 Report on Pensions, Mass-Observation Ltd., 03 1966 (unpublished).Google Scholar

4 Reprinted by permission of Mass-Observation (U.K.) Ltd.

5 Choice in Welfare, 1970, Harris, R. and Seldon, A., London: Institute of Economic Affairs, 1971.Google Scholar

6 New Society, 12 10 1967.Google Scholar