This article argues that retirement income provision in Canada is built on gendered assumptions, which produce material disadvantage for women. These inequalities are being exacerbated by current neoliberal trends towards the \u27marketization\u27 and individualization of pension provision, supported by tax, securities and corporate legal norms. The argument is developed using recent legislative changes to the operation of the Canada Pension Plan and recent developments in the regulation of mutual funds in Ontario as case studies. The article concludes by sketching out some possible points of departure for feminist interventions in pension privatization debates
The growth in precarious em ployment and an escalating crisis in social reproduction suggest increas...
Historically, women have had fewer opportunities than men to contribute to the labour force mainly d...
Beyond income, wealth is an important measure of economic well-being, because while income captures ...
This paper examines how the governance of new employer-sponsored pension arrangements in Canada medi...
In 2008–9, expert pension panels that were established by four provinces, Alberta and British Columb...
Gendered poverty among the elderly is a statistical fact. Previous studies have identified inequita...
Legal problems involved in pension plans and the statutory regulation of pensions have been the subj...
Bringing together insights from feminist political economy and everyday financialization, this paper...
This paper explores the gender inequality of pension income in Canada and its relation to the pensio...
This work contributes to the political economy literature by elucidating gendered socio-cultural pra...
This article emerges from an exploration of the meanings of consumer bankruptcy in the current conte...
In tracing the history of retirement in Canada it is evident that retirements is a social institutio...
Any observer of the recent politics and economics of Western democratic states will be familiar with...
The growth in precarious em ployment and an escalating crisis in social reproduction suggest increas...
Historically, women have had fewer opportunities than men to contribute to the labour force mainly d...
Beyond income, wealth is an important measure of economic well-being, because while income captures ...
This paper examines how the governance of new employer-sponsored pension arrangements in Canada medi...
In 2008–9, expert pension panels that were established by four provinces, Alberta and British Columb...
Gendered poverty among the elderly is a statistical fact. Previous studies have identified inequita...
Legal problems involved in pension plans and the statutory regulation of pensions have been the subj...
Bringing together insights from feminist political economy and everyday financialization, this paper...
This paper explores the gender inequality of pension income in Canada and its relation to the pensio...
This work contributes to the political economy literature by elucidating gendered socio-cultural pra...
This article emerges from an exploration of the meanings of consumer bankruptcy in the current conte...
In tracing the history of retirement in Canada it is evident that retirements is a social institutio...
Any observer of the recent politics and economics of Western democratic states will be familiar with...
The growth in precarious em ployment and an escalating crisis in social reproduction suggest increas...
Historically, women have had fewer opportunities than men to contribute to the labour force mainly d...
Beyond income, wealth is an important measure of economic well-being, because while income captures ...