000 01416pab a2200181 454500
008 180718b2013 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aMeyer, Madonna Harrington
245 _aChanging social security in the US: Rising insecurity?
260 _c2013
300 _ap.135-146.
362 _aJan
520 _aAlthough poverty rates among the elderly in the US are at an all-time low, many face rising fiscal insecurity. The US welfare state is being remodeled in market-friendly ways that maximise individual choice, risk, and responsibility, rather than family friendly ways that maximise shared risk and responsibility and reduce insecurity. This article analyses how each of the main sources of income for the aged are being either frozen or shrunk in ways that are likely to increase inequality and insecurity in the years ahead among the elderly, particularly those who are female, black and/or Hispanic, and unmarried. The article assesses various policy changes for their capacity to either increase or decrease financial insecurity and inequality, particularly for those with a life time of lower earnings, more labour force disruptions and greater responsibility for providing unpaid care work for the young, disabled or frail elderly. - Reproduced.
650 _aSocial security - United States
650 _aSocial security
773 _aSocial Policy and Society
908 _aN
909 _a98896
999 _c98895
_d98895