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Linking Benefits to Marital Status: Race and Social Security in the US
2005
Feminist Economics
In the US, marital status is more important than work history in determining economic security for many older women. Two-thirds of older women in the US receive spouse or widow Social Security benefits. These benefits generally require recipients to be currently married or to have had a ten-year marriage. Declining marriage rates, coupled with shorter marriages, dramatically change the distributional impact of these benefits on each cohort as they become eligible for Social Security. This paper
doi:10.1080/13545700500115977
fatcat:lx5zstyqajh55nuqvmjz3tqbbq