| Literature DB >> 32519304 |
Abstract
As populations age and longevity rises, the structure of the extended family is changing. Parents of young children are increasingly turning to the children's grandparents to provide childcare and help them reconcile work and family. This study is the first to investigate whether would-be grandparents' propensity to care for their grandchildren influences the adult children's transition to parenthood. Because grandparental childcare provision is not observable at the time of the transition to the first birth, I built a measure based on the characteristics of both actual grandparents and adult children to act as a proxy for the childcare that prospective grandparents are expected to provide in the future. Using data from the first two waves of the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe, I examine changes in the likelihood of having a first birth by different levels of expected future childcare provision. Given that the role grandparents play varies depending on the national context, I estimate distinct models for different groups of countries. Furthermore, I analyze different intensities of grandparental childcare: regular, occasional, and any other type of positive childcare. The comparison across 11 countries reveals that grandparental propensity to provide occasional childcare has a positive effect on the transition to parenthood in all country clusters and that grandparental propensity to provide regular childcare has a positive and significant association with having a first child in both pro-natalist (Belgium and France) and pro-traditional countries (Austria, Germany, Greece, Italy, Spain, and Switzerland).Entities:
Keywords: Childcare; Fertility; Grandparents; Intergenerational relations; Transition to parenthood
Year: 2020 PMID: 32519304 PMCID: PMC7441078 DOI: 10.1007/s13524-020-00890-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Demography ISSN: 0070-3370
Fig. 1Group of countries according to Gauthier’s classification
Dependent variable distribution for each group of countries: First step
| Regular Childcare = 1 | Occasional Childcare = 1 | Any Type of Childcare = 1 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | ||||
| Pro-Natalist ( | 876 | 23.87 | 1,022 | 27.85 | 1,898 | 51.7 |
| Pro-Traditional ( | 1,580 | 30.74 | 1,054 | 20.51 | 2,634 | 51.2 |
| Pro-Egalitarian ( | 658 | 14.56 | 1,616 | 35.75 | 2,274 | 50.3 |
Note: Regular means that childcare is provided at least once per week, occasional means that childcare is provided no more than once per month, and any type refers to any positive intensity of childcare provision.
Dependent variable distribution (first-birth transitions) for each group of countries: Second step
| Pro-Egalitarian | Pro-Traditional | Pro-Natalist | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | % | ||||
| 0 | 2,092 | 83.2 | 4,184 | 88.8 | 1,768 | 87.0 |
| 1 | 425 | 16.8 | 526 | 11.2 | 263 | 12.9 |
| Total | 2,517 | 4,710 | 2,031 | |||
Note: Here, the dependent variable measures whether a first birth occurred between the two waves.
Fig. 2Marginal effect of grandparental childcare propensity on having a first birth by group of country and type of expected childcare provision (second step)
Fig. 3Predicted probability of grandparental childcare propensity on having a first birth by group of countries and type of expected childcare provision (second step)