Steve Griffiths argues that raising the retirement age will harm more than just the nation’s finances - it will also harm the nation’s health.
Steve Griffiths is a campaigner against the vilification and impoverishment of people who are unable to work due to sickness or disability
George Osborne has warned us that the costs of providing decent state pensions are going to become more and more unaffordable unless we take further action. And we’ve got to do it in response to rising life expectancy. So the state pension will be set to come in at 67.
Looking at the evidence, one begins to wonder whether Osborne has understood ‘the response to rising life expectancy’ as meaning that life expectancy must be reduced.
We heard many of the strikers last month lament that they just can’t work that long – another 40 years for a 27-year-old, say, physiotherapist working for the NHS.
It’s a perception that is borne out by research. Work through the sixties is just not viable for a high proportion of the population.
The Marmot Review (pdf) found:
People in poorer areas not only die sooner, but they will also spend more of their shorter lives with a disability… even excluding the poorest five percent and the richest five percent, the gap in life expectancy between low and high income is six years, and in disability-free life expectancy thirteen years.
This is in the context of a mean disability-free life expectancy in the UK in 2005/7 of 62.5 years in men, and 63.7 in women. If that is the mean, very many people will become disabled much earlier.
The tail-off in the health benefit of work is already pronounced through the sixties (if, of course, the jobs exist in the first place). Add to that the health effects of the socio-economic hierarchy in work. The report endlessly quoted by Tories and New Labour as saying that ‘all work is good for you’ is instructive on that.
While work is ‘generally’ good for you, it says:
… in terms of promoting health and wellbeing, the characteristics that distinguish ‘good’ jobs and ‘good’ workplaces might include: safety; fair pay; social gradients in health; job security; personal fulfilment and development; investing in human capital; accommodating, supportive and non-discriminatory (work); control / autonomy; job satisfaction; good communications.
Being forced to work through the sixties will create a new and powerful multiplier of that health inequality.
We can expect a rapid escalation of the achievement of the Thatcher government, as Acheson’s ‘Inequalities in Health’ report found at the dawn of the New Labour administration:
… in the early 1970s, the mortality rate among men of working age was almost twice as high for those in class V (unskilled) as for those in class I (professional). By the early 1990s, it was almost three times higher.
Alongside escalating inequality in life expectancy, it is instructive to consider the increase in incapacity benefit claims over the same period: people didn’t just drop off their perches without getting ill, leaving incapacity benefit to a growing body of malingerers. One would expect the same kind of escalation in the next two decades.
But hang on – the government boast that they are reducing access to Incapacity Benefit’s successor, ESA. Jobseeker’s allowance is increasingly crammed with people in poor health. The role of doctors as a gateway to incapacity benefits is all but eliminated, and there are plans afoot to elbow doctors out of even short-term decisions on unfitness for work and bring in the hard nuts from Atos.
More poor health, less financial support, equals still more poor health. The strong statistical link (pdf) in recent years between high levels of incapacity benefit claims and high levels of emergency hospital admissions has been established. The steep rise in cost to the NHS will be unstoppable, as will be the suffering.
We’ll see how far the compliance of a subdued and misinformed population can be taken. But there is little doubt that raising the pension age to 67 will be seen to be a spectacularly false economy.
See also:
• Hutton repeats his big fat lie on public sector pensions – Alex Hern, November 4th 2011
• Hutton should read his pensions report again before leaping to Cameron’s rescue – Michael Burke, September 16th 2011
• Rising inequality is making social and political conflict more likely – Duncan Exley, June 29th 2011
• Moving the goalposts on pensions is unfair and unjust – Rachel Reeves MP, June 20th 2011
• Public split on pensions reform – Shamik Das, June 20th 2011
30 Responses to “Raising the pension age will be a public health disaster”
Tim Klotz Davenport
Raising the pension age will be a public health disaster, writes Steve Griffiths: http://t.co/Cc4CWfP8
Anonymous
Would be nice…..
Anonymous
try slinging a sledge hammer for forty hours a week, digging holes, I know teaching is harder.
Alison Brown
Raising the pension age will be a public health disaster: http://t.co/hHwznO6p We must do something to stop this-what can we do?
Doug Nelson
This piece sits well with a very good book that I just read about Labour pioneer Will Crooks MP who was part of the Old Age Pensions committee that campaigned for 10 years for the introduction of a national pension scheme. As chairman of the Poplar Guardians in charge of running the Poplar workhouse, for him, a national pension scheme was desirable to reduce the number of the aged poor being forced into seeing out their old age as inmates of the workhouse. I’ve seen a few articles online recently where people are actually talking about the prospect of bringing back the workhouse. God I hope not. I’d rather work for a few more years before I can claim my pension than to go back to the workhouse days. The book by the way if anyone is interested is ‘Where there’s a Will, there’s a way’ by Jim Crooks. It’s available from Amazon, but here is a link to the Authors website too: http://www.jimsbooksite.com/