Literature DB >> 28804331

The balance of intergenerational family transfers: a life-cycle perspective.

Stipica Mudrazija1.   

Abstract

The aim of this study is to determine the likelihood and net amount of parent-child transfers over the adult life cycle across European welfare regimes. The study introduces an economic life-cycle model of family transfers to describe the evolution of family exchanges across generations over time, which reveals a nonlinear relationship of age and net family transfers. Furthermore, it refines the method of estimating parent-child net transfers. Data come from the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe, and include 36,095 parent-child dyads from 11 European countries representing social democratic, conservative, and traditional welfare-state regimes. The findings reveal net value of family intergenerational support follows a nonlinear pattern across the adult life cycle, with positive transfers from parents to adult children decreasing modestly until advanced old age when the decrease intensifies. Net family support benefits individuals and generations with larger relative need. The transition in the net family support pattern starts later and is less pronounced across social democratic welfare-regime countries while the opposite is true in traditional welfare-regime countries. These findings might be interpreted as being linked to differences in the public policies guaranteeing different levels of provision for dependent populations across different welfare regimes. They are consistent with a comparatively smaller role of family support in the intergenerational redistribution of resources in societies with larger public intergenerational support to dependent populations.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Intergenerational transfers; Life cycle; SHARE; Welfare regimes

Year:  2013        PMID: 28804331      PMCID: PMC5549198          DOI: 10.1007/s10433-013-0302-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Ageing        ISSN: 1613-9372


  4 in total

1.  Giving between generations in American families.

Authors:  D J Eggebeen; D P Hogan
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  1990-09

2.  Generational Economics in a Changing World.

Authors:  Ronald D Lee; Andrew Mason
Journal:  Popul Dev Rev       Date:  2011-01-01

3.  Reciprocity in parent-child relations over the adult life course.

Authors:  Merril Silverstein; Stephen J Conroy; Haitao Wang; Roseann Giarrusso; Vern L Bengtson
Journal:  J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci       Date:  2002-01       Impact factor: 4.077

4.  The balance of intergenerational exchange: correlates of net transfers in Germany and Israel.

Authors:  Howard Litwin; Claudia Vogel; Harald Künemund; Martin Kohli
Journal:  Eur J Ageing       Date:  2008-06
  4 in total
  3 in total

1.  Childlessness and upward intergenerational support: cross-national evidence from 11 European countries.

Authors:  Luca Maria Pesando
Journal:  Ageing Soc       Date:  2018-01-11

2.  Cross-national Differences in Intergenerational Family Relations: The Influence of Public Policy Arrangements.

Authors:  Pearl A Dykstra
Journal:  Innov Aging       Date:  2018-01-04

Review 3.  Scoping Review: Intergenerational Resource Transfer and Possible Enabling Factors.

Authors:  Eliza Lai-Yi Wong; Jennifer Mengwei Liao; Christopher Etherton-Beer; Loretta Baldassar; Gary Cheung; Claire Margaret Dale; Elisabeth Flo; Bettina Sandgathe Husebø; Roy Lay-Yee; Adele Millard; Kathy Ann Peri; Praveen Thokala; Chek-Hooi Wong; Patsy Yuen-Kwan Chau; Crystal Ying Chan; Roger Yat-Nork Chung; Eng-Kiong Yeoh
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-10-27       Impact factor: 3.390

  3 in total

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