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Greater Financial Security for Women with Personal Retirement Accounts

September 16, 1999

The New York Times reported Monday on the importance of women to the debate over Social Security, Medicare and other programs aiding the elderly. Since women have life expectancies six years longer than men's, they make up a larger share of the elderly population. And because they generally have lower incomes than men, elderly women often find themselves disproportionately dependent upon programs like Social Security.

Cato's Darcy Olsen explored the impact of Social Security on women in Cato Briefing Paper No. 38, Greater Financial Security for Women with Personal Retirement Accounts. Social Security currently leaves many older women in poverty, and Olsen found that privatization would benefit women across the board. Olsen concluded that Social Security featuring "fully private accounts would significantly improve the retirement incomes of women - single, married, divorced, or widowed with low-to-moderate, moderate, or average incomes..."

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  By 2030, there will be 70 million Americans of retirement age--twice as many as today.
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"The largely Cato Institute-staffed presidential commission owes its existence to the Cato Institute itself. For the last quarter of a century, the Washington, D.C.-based libertarian think tank has been campaigning for the privatization of Social Security."

- William O'Rourke
Chicago Sun Times
August 28, 2001