How was it right that women could retire at 60 and men have always had to work till 65 even though their life expectancy is less? Those that have said they have struggled to work past 60 due to medical issues hasn’t this always been the case for men?
It was right because the gender pay gap has always worked in favour of men, because it was legal to pay men more than women until the mid 70s, because even after that it has traditionally been women who took time off to have children, because both that and discrimination kept more women than men in lower paid jobs, and because (probably the most likely reason) when the ages were set, women tended to marry slightly older men, and if they had both retired at the same age there would have been nobody at home to look after them
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The main objection, however, is that women were not properly informed that this was going to happen. I know that there are those who refuse to believe it on the grounds that because they knew, everyone should have known, but I'm afraid that nobody can know what other people knew - it's just not possible.
The government has admitted that women were not informed. I was aware of the changes, but I was not told - I have a letter from HMRC in response to an FOI request I made years ago, which clearly states that they have no record of any correspondence with me about my pension. When the changes were made, few people had access to the internet, and the people most affected would be unlikely to read financial pages either. Many employers didn't point it out, and many women weren't in unions.
Also, it is not, or shouldn't be, a race to the bottom.