01497nam a22001457a 4500999001900000008004100019100003100060245010400091260003400195300003300229520094000262773003401202942000701236952010801243 c533173d533173260428b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aAkhtar, Saddaf Naaz960290 aInvisible in retirement: Gender disparities in work-related social insurance coverage in later life aEconomic & Political Weekly  a61(9), Feb 28, 2026: p.53-59 aPopulation ageing poses growing challenges for social protection in India, where social insurance coverage remains limited and uneven. Using data from the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India, this paper examines gender disparities in social insurance coverage among older people. The findings reveal an absolute gender gap of approximately 11% in social insurance coverage, with older women facing compounded disadvantages due to informal work histories and economic dependence. A clear educational gradient was observed, with higher education strongly associated with greater coverage. Older adults reporting low or medium subjective social status and lower life satisfaction exhibit significantly lower odds of coverage, underscoring the importance of perceived inequality and psychosocial vulnerability in welfare access. –Reproduced https://www.epw.in/journal/2026/9/ageing-health-and-social-security/invisible-retirement.html  aEconomic & Political Weekly  cAR 00102ddc40709408344aIIPAbIIPAd2026-04-28h61(9), Feb 28, 2026: p.53-59pAR138685r2026-04-28yAR