All Topics

Income Supports

From nutrition assistance to Social Security to Unemployment Insurance, income supports help make sure that all women, LGBTQ people, and their families can make ends meet, live with economic dignity, and have the opportunity for a brighter tomorrow. NWLC is working to ensure that these programs and services have robust funding and that women and LGBTQ people can access them.

Family Support Programs

Because women face a greater risk of economic insecurity throughout their lives and are more likely to be supporting families on their own, public benefits programs are especially important to women. NWLC is working to ensure that these programs and services have robust funding and that women and LGBTQ people can access them.

Housing

Housing impacts every aspect of the lives of women, LGBTQ people, and their families—which is why NWLC works across the government and in communities to ensure everyone has fair access to affordable and accessible housing.

Pensions & Savings

Women on average live longer than men–but usually have fewer pension benefits and retirement savings. Improving pensions and retirement savings for women would supplement Social Security–and is critical to women’s retirement security.

Social Security

Social Security is critically important to women, and especially to women of color. Without it, about half of all women 65 and older would be poor. It also provides valuable disability and life insurance protections to workers and their families. NWLC is fighting to ensure a secure and dignified retirement for women and LGBTQ people

Tax & Budget

NWLC fights for a tax code that centers and invests in women—particularly women of color and women with low incomes–and a federal budget that invests in women, LGBTQ people, their families, and all of us.

Unemployment Insurance

Unemployment insurance (UI) is a social insurance program that provides temporary wage replacement to unemployed workers who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own. Women—who typically experience lower earnings and a higher risk of poverty than men—need strong unemployment protections to ensure they are able to weather periods of hardship.

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