Social Pensions and Intimate Partner Violence against Older Women

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Author
Bellés-Obrero, Cristina ;
La Mattina, Giulia ;
Ye, Han
Date issued
Oct 2024
Subject
Women;
Pension Systems;
Non Contributory Pension;
Population Aging;
Economy;
Intimate Partner Violence;
Retirement Saving;
Conditional Cash Transfer;
Income Support;
Violence Prevention;
Domestic Violence
JEL code
I10 - Health: General;
I12 - Health Behavior;
I14 - Health and Inequality;
I31 - General Welfare, Well-Being
Country
Mexico
Category
Working Papers
The prevalence and determinants of intimate partner violence (IPV) among older women are severely understudied. This paper documents that the incidence of IPV remains high at old ages and provides the first evidence of the impact of access to income on IPV for older women. We leverage a Mexican reform that lowered the eligibility age for a non-contributory pension and a difference-in-differences approach. Women's eligibility for the pension increases their probability of being subjected to economic, psychological, and physical IPV. The estimated effects are found only among women in the short-term and are more pronounced for women who
experienced family violence in childhood and those from poorer households. In contrast, we show that IPV does not increase when men become eligible for the non-contributory pension. Looking at potential mechanisms, we find suggestive evidence that men use violence as a tool to control women's resources. Additionally, women reduce paid employment after becoming eligible for the pension, which may result in more time spent at home and greater exposure to violent partners.
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