Report Gaindegia 2008: Studies from 2008- The hopes and needs of pensioners and the elderly

THE HOPES AND NEEDS OF PENSIONERS AND THE ELDERLY
  • Title: Study of living conditions

  • Publisher: Ipar-Hegoa Fundazioa

  • Author: Barrenetxea Sandra, Elorriaga Iñaki, Ruiz de Pinedo Iñaki

  • Language: gaztelania

  • Number of pages: 100

  • Publication date: 2008/06

  • Acces to the study: Ipar-Hegoa Fundazioa

Approximately 20% of the population of the Basque Country are over the age of 65 and receive a pension. Basque society is now made up of more old people than young people. The statistics clearly reveal an aging society in which senior citizens are becoming an increasingly important sector, and that there are people who think that social policy, health care and many other resources should be reorganised in accordance with their needs.

However, there is little information available in regard to the living conditions and needs of pensioners and the elderly.

There are no studies showing how they live, what their concerns and needs are or what they want, and it will therefore be difficult to put the proper solutions into effect.

The aim of the present study is to make up for these shortcomings. An overall snapshot has been taken of the needs of the Basque Country’s pensioners and elderly people, and a report has been drawn up seeking to outline effective policies.

The Ipar Hegoa foundation has used three sources of information. Firstly, it has carried out a survey of people over 65 and pensioners.
It has also compiled data from a number of organisations: EUSTAT (Basque Statistics Office), INE (National Statistics Institute), INSS (Spanish Social Security Office), INSEE (National Institute for Statistics and Economic Studies), Gaindegia (Observatory of the social and economic development of the Basque Country). Finally, interviews have been conducted with members of senior citizens’ associations and various experts in the field.

For the purposes of collating and analysing this information, the Ipar Hegoa foundation has used five basic indicators in relation to pensioners and the elderly in The South Basque Country: financial circumstances, health, home life and living conditions, leisure pursuits, and lastly their perceptions, hopes and challenges. The study analyses these one by one, dedicating a separate chapter to each. First, a series of relevant statistics are set out, including data concerning the pensions received. Living conditions are then analysed, along with health and financial circumstances. Lastly, the study registers the subjects’ ideological and religious beliefs, as well as their views on the current pensions system.

Having undertaken the analysis from these various angles, the study concludes that half of the pensioners and elderly people in the Basque Country live below the poverty line, with monthly incomes of less than 715 euros. Almost half find it hard to cover their basic needs, with women twice as likely to suffer poverty.

According to the study, most of the elderly people in The South Basque Country (91.6%) own their own homes, while in The North Basque Country more than half do (56.9%). But most of these homes are old, and very few meet current standards of accessibility.

Most elderly people (83%) say that they live well and are happy, and more than half consider their health to be satisfactory and have no difficulty in coping with everyday life. Their level of education is low, more than three-quarters having only had a basic or lower-level education. The main concerns of the elderly in the Basque Country are health and the family, and most are practising Catholics.

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