The Borneo Post

Russian women fear later-life hardship from pension reform

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MOSCOW: Russian government plans to raise the pension age have sparked a rare outpouring of anger, not least among women who say it will cause hardship at a stage of life when they already struggle to work.

On the day the first football fans descended on Russia for the World Cup, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev announced plans to increase the age by eight years to 63 for women and five years to 65 for men.

Critics immediatel­y complained that with men’s life expectancy at 66, many may not live long enough to get their pensions.

But Russian women are angry for another reason: once in middle age, they will struggle to find work to tide them over for the extra years without a pension.

“It’s very hard to find a job as a woman over a certain age. Women are scared of being left without a pension or a job,” said Muscovite Tatiana Volochkova, 57.

She receives a state pension of 17,000 rubles ( US$ 269) but continues to work as an accountant.

Many women say the eightyear rise in their retirement age is disproport­ionate.

“A gradual reform is probably necessary but not with such a big difference (in the rise) between men and women,” Volochkova said.

Valentina Zholkina, 44, has been unsuccessf­ully looking for a job in Moscow for two years.

The company she used to work for shut down while she was on maternity leave. Now she says employers are put off by her age.

“In private, they say that after a certain age, it’s not right for women to sit behind a banking counter,” she said.

Zholkina said that older men can take temporary physical work if they are short of money.

But older women struggle to get employed even in low-paid jobs. Receiving a pension at 55, she said, at least gave them a safety net.

Anna Nesterova, a 50 year- old Moscow-based designer, said the pension reform could also affect young families as Russian grandmothe­rs play a larger role in bringing up children than in the West.

“People have a choice either to send their child to nursery or leave them with the grandmothe­r. Many still choose the family option,” she told AFP.

Others say grandmothe­rs sitting at home with children is a thing of the past.

“Babushkas (grandmas) are modern now. We don’t want to sacrifice all our time looking after children,” said 67-year- old pensioner Antonina, who refused to give her last name.

But she agreed that an eightyear increase is too much.

“In Russian families, everything depends on women. You need to balance work and family,” she said. “Sixty-three is very high.”

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