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FOURTH
SECTION
CASE OF
BARROW v. THE UNITED KINGDOM
(Application
no. 42735/02)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
22
August 2006
This
judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44
§ 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial
revision.
In the case of Barrow v. the United Kingdom,
The
European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber
composed of:
Mr J. Casadevall,
President,
Sir Nicolas Bratza,
Mr G. Bonello,
Mr M.
Pellonpää,
Mr K. Traja,
Mr S. Pavlovschi,
Mr J.
Šikuta, judges,
and Mr T.L. Early, Section
Registrar,
Having
deliberated in private on 27 April 2004 and 11 July 2006,
Delivers
the following judgment, which was adopted on the last mentioned
date:
PROCEDURE
- The
case originated in an application (no. 42735/02) against the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland lodged with the Court
under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by a British
national, Mrs Joyce Barrow (“the applicant”), on 22
November 2002.
- The
United Kingdom Government (“the Government”) were
represented by their Agent, Mr D. Walton of the Foreign and
Commonwealth Office, London.
- The
applicant alleged that as a woman she was unable to receive
invalidity benefit after the age of 60, whereas a man could receive
such benefit until the age of 65. The case raised issues under
Article 14 in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
- The
application was allocated to the Fourth Section of the Court (Rule 52
§ 1 of the Rules of Court). Within that Section, the
Chamber that would consider the case (Article 27 § 1 of the
Convention) was constituted as provided in Rule 26 § 1.
- By
a decision of 27 April 2004, the Court declared the application
admissible.
- The
applicant and the Government each filed observations on the merits
(Rule 59 § 1).
- Following
the judgment of the Grand Chamber in Stec and Others v. the United
Kingdom [GC], nos. 65731/01 and 65900/01, 12 April 2006), the
Government, but not the applicant, submitted further observations.
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
- The applicant was born in 1943 and lives in Wrexham.
- In
August 2003 the applicant turned 60 years of age. Prior to that date
she was in receipt of long-term incapacity benefit (IB), a benefit
payable to people incapable of work who satisfy the eligibility
criteria. She had qualified for the rate of 81.85 pounds sterling
(GBP) per week. She was also paid GBP 39.95 per week in disability
living allowance (DLA) and GBP 15.15 in DLA care. At age 60,
which is the date of entitlement to the State pension for women, she
ceased to be eligible for IB. In its place she became entitled to
draw her state retirement pension which, based upon her contribution
record, entitled her to GBP 57.81 per week (about 62% of the maximum
rate as she had only contributed for 24 years out of 39). She
continued to draw DLA. As a result, the applicant claimed that she
was some GBP 24.04 per week worse off as a result of her transition
from IB to the State pension.
- The
applicant complained to the Department of Work and Pensions
concerning the differential treatment but was informed that nothing
could be done.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
1. National Insurance
- The
National Insurance Act 1946, which first established the basis for
the national social security scheme in the United Kingdom, set out a
system of funding under which all employers and the majority of the
working population, whether employed or self-employed, are liable to
pay compulsory national insurance (“NI”) contributions
into the National Insurance Fund (NIF). This legislation has since
been replaced, most recently, by the consolidating provisions of the
Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 (“SSCBA
1992”) and the Social Security Administration Act 1992.
- Section
1(2) of the SSCBA sets out the various classes of NI contribution. Of
these, the largest category is Class 1 contributions which consist of
earnings-related contributions paid by employers and employees. Such
contributions are levied as a percentage of earnings which varies
according to the employee’s earnings band. The NI scheme is
financed on a “pay as you go” basis, that is, current NI
contributions fund current benefits: thus an individual’s
contributions fund not his or her own benefits but those of others
(R. (Carson) v. Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
[2002] 3 All ER paras. 25-26).
- Primary
Class 1 contributions to NI cease to be payable on attainment of the
State retirement age (section 6(3) of the SSCBA).
- The
NIF is currently the sole source of funding for payment of state
retirement pensions as well as a number of other benefits, including
IB. Topping up into the fund by way of Treasury Grant is possible in
times of shortfall but has not occurred since 1997/1998.
2. Invalidity Benefit (IB)
- The
Social Security (Incapacity for work) Act 1994 amended the 1992 Act
so as to include provision for the payment of IB from April 1995.
Section 1 provides, as relevant:
“... (1) Subject to the following provisions of
this section, a person who satisfies either of the following
conditions is entitled to short-term incapacity benefit in respect of
any day of incapacity for work which forms part of a period of
incapacity for work.
(2) The conditions are that -
(a) he is under pensionable age on the day in
question and satisfies the contribution conditions specified for
short-term incapacity benefit in Schedule 3, Part 1, paragraph 2;
...
(4) In any period of incapacity for work a
person is not entitled to short-term incapacity benefit for more than
364 days.
(5) Where a person ceases by virtue of
subsection (4) above to be entitled to short-term incapacity benefit,
he is entitled to long-term incapacity benefit in respect of any
subsequent day of incapacity for work in the same period of
incapacity for work on which he is not over pensionable age.”
- IB
is a contributory benefit funded out of NI contributions, designed to
compensate a person for financial loss as a result of their inability
to work due to ill-health or disability. It is therefore available
throughout the assumed working life. As a result the period of
entitlement is directly linked, for men and women, to the period of
entitlement (if any) to receive the State retirement pension. When an
individual reaches State pension age any entitlement to such a
pension takes the place of IB. A full basic retirement pension pays
GBP 77.45 per week, while the standard rate of IB is GBP 72.15.
3. State retirement pension
- At
the relevant time, section 122 of the Social Security Contributions
and Benefits Act 1992 defined “pensionable age” as:
“(a) the age of 65, in the case of a
man; and
(b) the age of 60, in the case of a woman”.
- Women
in the United Kingdom therefore become eligible for a State pension
at the age of 60, whereas men are not eligible until 65.
- Section
126 of the Pensions Act 1995 provides for the equalisation of State
pension ages for men and women to the age of 65. The State pension
age for women will increase gradually from 2010 and the equalisation
will be complete in 2020. At the same time, the age until which women
are liable to pay national insurance contributions will gradually
increase in line with the increase in the State pension age.
C. European Union law
- Council
Directive 79/7/EEC of 19 December 1978 provides for the progressive
implementation of the principle of equal treatment for men and women
in matters of social security. However, in Article 7(1)(a) the
Directive provides for derogation in the matter of “the
determination of pensionable age for the purposes of granting old-age
and retirement pensions and the possible consequences thereof for
other benefits”.
- In
its judgment in Case C-328/91 Thomas and Others [1993] ECR I-1247, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruled that where,
pursuant to Article 7(1)(a), a Member State prescribed different
pensionable ages for men and women for the purpose of granting
old-age and retirement pensions the scope of the permitted derogation
defined by the words “possible consequences thereof for other
benefits” was limited to the forms of discrimination existing
under other benefits schemes which were necessarily and objectively
linked to the difference in pensionable age. That was the position
where such forms of discrimination were objectively necessary to
avoid disturbing the financial equilibrium of the social security
system or to ensure coherence between the retirement pension scheme
and other benefit schemes.
- In
Case C-92/94 Secretary of State for Social Security v. Graham
[1999] ECR I-2521, the ECJ considered the predecessor of IB,
namely invalidity allowance and invalidity pension (both contributory
benefits paid from NI contributions until pensionable age or until
the cessation of any deferment in pension). It found that the
measures were justified by both considerations of financial
equilibrium and overall coherence and that the discrimination was
necessarily linked to the difference in pensionable age for men and
women, inter alia as invalidity benefit was designed to
replace income from occupational activity and was replaced by a
retirement pension at the age at which the recipients would in any
event stop working.
- The
derogation was not however held to justify pension-aged linked
discrimination in a number of benefits e.g. in R. v.
Secretary of State for Social Security, ex parte Taylor [1999]
ECR I-8955, the ECJ held that the provision of winter fuel allowances
for the elderly was not necessarily linked to the difference in the
statutory age of retirement for men and women and in R. v.
Secretary of State for Health ex parte Richardson [1995] ECR
I-3407, the ECJ found that the discrimination in age entitlement to
free prescriptions was not objectively justified to ensure coherence
between the retirement pension system and the regulations concerning
prescriptions and was not necessarily linked to the difference
between pensionable ages for men and women.
- In
Case C-9/91 The Queen v. Secretary of State for Social Security ,
ex parte Equal Opportunities Commission [1992] ECR1-4297 (“the
EOC case” concerning a reference for a preliminary ruling from
the High Court relating to the differing contribution periods
applicable to men and women determined according to pensionable age),
the ECJ found that:
Article 7(1)(a) had
to be interpreted as authorising the determination of a statutory
pensionable age which differs according to sex for the purposes of
granting old-age and retirement pensions and also forms of
discrimination which are necessarily linked to that difference;
Inequality between
men and women with respect to the length of contribution periods
required to obtain a pension constitutes such discrimination where,
having regard to the financial equilibrium of the national pension
system in the context in which it appears, it cannot be dissociated
from a difference in pensionable age;
In view of the
advantages allowed to women by national pension systems, in
particular as regards statutory pensionable age and length of
contribution periods, and the disruption that would necessarily be
caused to the equilibrium of those systems if the principle of
equality between the sexes were to be applied from one day to the
next in respect of those periods, the Community legislature intended
to authorise the progressive implementation of that principle by the
Member States and that progressive nature could not be ensured if
the scope of the derogation authorised by Article 7(1)(a) were to be
interpreted restrictively.
THE LAW
I. ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 14 IN CONJUNCTION WITH
ARTICLE 1 OF PROTOCOL No. 1
- The applicant complained that she had lost her
entitlement to IB at age 60 whereas a man could continue to draw the
benefit until age 65. The relevant provisions of the Convention
provide:
Article
14 of the Convention:
“The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set
forth in [the] Convention shall be secured without discrimination on
any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a
national minority, property, birth or other status.”
Article
1 of Protocol No. 1:
“Every natural or legal person is entitled to the
peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of
his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the
conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of
international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way
impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems
necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the
general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other
contributions or penalties.”
A. The parties’ submissions
1. The applicant
- The
applicant submitted that it was grossly unfair that she was worse off
than a man in her position of the same age. The difference in benefit
received was of considerable importance to her. She pointed to the
Government’s own White Paper on the subject which referred to
the difference in State pension ages as “the last glaring
inequality in the Government’s treatment of men and women”
and to measures introduced by the European Union requiring equality
of treatment in benefits. The change in the law which would take
effect in 2020 would be far too late to benefit her. She disputed
that the system favoured women as a whole, pointing out that men were
able to enjoy a number of other benefits over the age of 60 even if
in full-time employment (e.g. winter fuel allowance, free
prescriptions). Men who were in receipt of IB over the age of 60 also
had their NI contributions paid in full allowing them to contribute
towards a higher State pension.
- In
so far as the level of her State pension was lower than IB due to her
incomplete contributions record, the applicant pointed out that this
was because she had had four children over seven years and had to
look after them for a number of years. She had been unaware, as she
was sure most women were, that her subsequent contributions on return
to work would not allow for a full State pension.
2. The Government
- The
Government accepted that Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 applied to the
case and that Article 14 was applicable to any discrimination in
relation to the availability of benefits such as the IB, funded from
the NIF. They submitted that the differential age for men and women
had, however, an objective and reasonable justification. They
emphasised that the social, historic and economic basis for the
provision of the State retirement pension, as well as the decision to
equalise the age progressively from 2010-2020 involved complex social
and economic judgments in respect of which the Government enjoyed a
broad margin of appreciation. It was not a simple case of sex
discrimination but involved issues of fair balance under Article 1 of
Protocol No. 1 where the Court had stated that it would respect the
legislator’s assessment in such matters unless it was devoid of
reasonable foundation.
- The
Government submitted that Parliament decided to implement the reform
to equalise State pension ages from 2020 as the measure had enormous
financial implications both for individuals and the State. In
particular, sudden change would adversely affect the interests of
women who had been expecting to receive a State pension at age 60 and
a long transitional period gave time for people to adjust their
expectations and arrange their affairs accordingly. Nor would it be
economically feasible for the Government to provide all 60-year-old
men with pensions pending equalisation in 2020 as it would involve
the diversion of substantial resources from other State needs (an
estimated cost of GBP 75 billion). After a full public consultation
exercise, the Government decided to bring the age up to 65 for all
based on the considerations that people lived longer and healthier
lives, there would be more pensioners supported by fewer people of
working age, public expenditure on pensions was set to double by 2035
and occupational schemes were predominantly equalising at the age of
65 already. They pointed out that the European Union had accepted
that Member States must be allowed a period of transition to plan and
implement the move to equal ages. The United Kingdom’s plans
were in line with other developed nations and the European Commission
had never suggested that its measures were in any way deficient or
disproportionate but had impliedly accepted them.
- The
Government furthermore submitted that the linkage of the IB to
pensionable age was objectively justified by the needs of financial
equilibrium and systemic coherence. IB was a benefit funded out of NI
contributions designed to protect the recipient against loss of
income due to incapacity for the duration of their presumed working
life. Systemic and fiscal coherence required that working life be
taken as the working life upon which State pensionable age and NI
contributions were based. Thus the linkage between the availability
of IB and State pensionable age was necessary and justified, as
accepted by the ECJ (see paragraph 21 above). It would not be
possible to change the linkage by setting all IB entitlements as
lasting to age 65 as this would produce incoherent results and impact
adversely, inter alia, on those women with more complete
pension contribution records than this applicant, who would find it
more advantageous to receive their pension early. The linkage was
also in the interests and fair treatment of other contributors to the
NIF, particularly male contributors who were generally disadvantaged
by the present scheme. They also pointed out that the discrimination
complained of in this case had a very narrow compass, affecting only
some women between age 60 and 65. The lower State pension age and NI
contribution record in the great majority of cases worked to the
advantage of women and the move from IB to a pension was advantageous
to women with a full or nearly full contribution record. The
difference in this applicant’s position was a direct reflection
of her contributions record. The fact that men over 60 in receipt of
IB had their NI contributions paid for a further five years did not
result in any unfair advantage as male entitlement to a full State
pension was set five years’ higher than that applicable to
women. A man with the applicant’s contribution record would
only receive a partial pension also, though at the rate of 66%
instead of 62%.
- The
Government referred to the recent judgment in Stec and Others v.
the United Kingdom [GC], nos. 65731/01 and 65900/01, 12 April
2006, submitting that this had addressed and disposed of the material
issues in the case, in particular that a linkage between benefits and
the old-age pension scheme was necessary to preserve coherence, that
there was a very generous margin of appreciation and that the
decisions as to the precise timing and means of putting right the
inequality were not so manifestly unreasonable as to exceed this
margin.
B. The Court’s assessment
32. Article
14 of the Convention has no independent existence; it has effect
solely in relation to “the enjoyment of the rights and
freedoms” safeguarded by those provisions. There can be no room
for its application unless the facts at issue fall within the ambit
of one or more of them (see, amongst other authorities, Gaygusuz
v. Austria, judgment of 16 September 1996, Reports of
Judgments and Decisions, 1996-IV, § 36). The Court notes
that the Government do not contest in this case that the applicant’s
entitlement to IB falls within the scope of Article 1 of Protocol No.
1 and thus that Article 14 is applicable to any complaint of
discrimination in that respect. Article 14 is accordingly engaged.
- The
principal issue in this case is whether the difference in treatment
whereby this applicant lost her entitlement to IB at age of 60,
whereas a man of that age would not, discloses discrimination based
on sex contrary to Article 14 of the Convention.
- According
to the Court’s case-law, a difference in treatment is
discriminatory for the purposes of Article 14 if it “has no
objective and reasonable justification”, that is if it does not
pursue a “legitimate aim” or if there is not a reasonable
relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the
aim sought to be realised. The Contracting States enjoy a certain
margin of appreciation in assessing whether or not and to what extent
differences in otherwise similar situations justify a different
treatment. However, very weighty reasons are required before the
Court would regard a difference of treatment based exclusively on the
grounds of sex as compatible with the Convention (see, among other
authorities, Willis v. the United Kingdom, no. 36042/97, ECHR
2002-IV, § 39).
- Against
this must be balanced the countervailing proposition that the margin
of appreciation available to the legislature in implementing social
and economic policies should be a wide one (see, inter alia,
James v. the United Kingdom, judgment of 21 February 1986,
Series A, no. 98, § 46). This applies to systems of taxation or
contributions which must inevitably differentiate between groups of
tax-payers and the implementation of which unavoidably creates
marginal situations. A Government may often have to strike a balance
between the need to raise revenue and reflecting other social
objectives in taxation policies. The national authorities are
obviously in a better position than the Court to assess those needs
and requirements, which in the present case involve complex concerns
about the financing of pensions and benefits which impact on the
community as a whole. In such an area the Court will generally
respect the legislature’s policy choice unless it is manifestly
unreasonable (see, as the latest authority, Stec and Others v. the
United Kingdom, cited above, § 52).
- The
Court recalls that in the afore-mentioned Stec case the Grand
Chamber had occasion to examine the alleged inequality arising out of
entitlement to the reduced earnings allowance ("REA") which
was linked to the State pension. As in this case, the applicant, Mrs
Stec, lost her entitlement to the benefit at the age of 60 while a
man would have continued to receive it until the age of 65. Both the
REA and IB were benefits designed to compensate a person for
financial loss as a result of their inability to work due to
ill-health or incapacity and thus connected to employment and working
life. The use of the State pension age as a cut off point made, the
Government argued, the scheme easy to understand and to administer
and the Court accepted that such questions of administrative economy
and coherence were generally matters falling within the margin of
appreciation referred to above (Stec, § 57). Also of
strong persuasive value is the ECJ’s stance on the objective
necessity of ensuring consistency with the pension scheme in the
entitlement to such employment-linked benefits (see Stec,
cited above, § 58, and Relevant domestic law and practice,
paragraphs 21-22). As in the Stec case therefore, the linkage
of the cut-off age of IB to the notional end of working life or State
pensionable age must be regarded as pursuing a legitimate aim and as
being reasonably and objectively justified (see § 59).
- As
regards the actual difference in State pension age between men and
women, the Grand Chamber in Stec had this to say.
"61. Differential pensionable ages were first
introduced for men and women in the United Kingdom in 1940, well
before the Convention had come into existence, although the disparity
persists to the present day (see paragraph 32 above). It would appear
that the difference in treatment was adopted in order to mitigate
financial inequality and hardship arising out of the woman’s
traditional unpaid role of caring for the family in the home rather
than earning money in the workplace. At their origin, therefore, the
differential pensionable ages were intended to correct ‘factual
inequalities’ between men and women and appear therefore to
have been objectively justified under Article 14 (see paragraph 51
above).
62. It follows that the difference in pensionable ages
continued to be justified until such time that social conditions had
changed so that women were no longer substantially prejudiced because
of a shorter working life. This change, must, by its very nature,
have been gradual, and it would be difficult or impossible to
pinpoint any particular moment when the unfairness to men caused by
differential pensionable ages began to outweigh the need to correct
the disadvantaged position of women. Certain indications are
available to the Court. Thus, in the 1993 White Paper, the Government
asserted that the number of women in paid employment had increased
significantly, so that whereas in 1967 only 37% of employees were
women, the proportion had increased to 50% in 1992. In addition,
various reforms to the way in which pension entitlement was assessed
had been introduced in 1977 and 1978, to the benefit of women who
spent long periods out of paid employment. As of 1986, it was
unlawful for an employer to have different retirement ages for men
and women (see paragraph 33 above).
63. According to the information before the Court, the
Government made a first, concrete, move towards establishing the same
pensionable age for both sexes with the publication of the Green
Paper in December 1991. It would, no doubt, be possible to argue that
this step could, or should, have been made earlier. However, as the
Court has observed, the development of parity in the working lives of
men and women has been a gradual process, and one which the national
authorities are better placed to assess (see paragraph 52 above).
Moreover, it is significant that many of the other Contracting States
still maintain a difference in the ages at which men and women become
eligible for the State retirement pension (see paragraph 37 above).
Within the European Union, this position is recognised by the
exception contained in the Directive (see paragraph 38 above).
64. In the light of the original justification for the
measure as correcting financial inequality between the sexes, the
slowly evolving nature of the change in women’s working lives,
and in the absence of a common standard amongst the Contracting
States (see Petrovic, cited above, §§ 36-43), the Court
finds that the United Kingdom cannot be criticised for not having
started earlier on the road towards a single pensionable age.
65. Having once begun the move towards equality,
moreover, the Court does not consider it unreasonable of the
Government to carry out a thorough process of consultation and
review, nor can Parliament be condemned for deciding in 1995 to
introduce the reform slowly and in stages. Given the extremely
far-reaching and serious implications, for women and for the economy
in general, these are matters which clearly fall within the State’s
margin of appreciation.”
- The
alleged discrimination in the present case flows from exactly the
difference in ages of entitlement to the State pension discussed
above. In light of the Grand Chamber’s finding that the policy
adopted by the legislature in deferring equalisation of the pension
age for men and women until 2020 fell within the State’s margin
of appreciation, the Court cannot but reach the same conclusion in
the present case.
- There
has, accordingly, been no violation of Article 14 of the Convention
taken in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
Holds that there has been no violation of Article 14 of
the Convention in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 22 August 2006, pursuant
to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
T.L. Early Josep Casadevall
Registrar President