Literature DB >> 6394374

Children and the elderly: divergent paths for America's dependents.

S H Preston.   

Abstract

Let me summarize briefly. My argument is that we have made a set of private and public choices that have dramatically altered the age profile of well-being. These choices are in an important sense joint ones involving the number of dependents we have as well as the conditions in which they live. This jointness derives from several sources. One is that the same institution--the conjugal family--remains the principal agent responsible for both childbearing and childrearing. Factors that influence the health of that institution invariably affect both numbers of and conditions for children. There was simply no way to protect children fully from the earthquake that shuddered through the American family in the past 20 years. The factors at work here are not only the objective conditions we face but also the set of values and mental constructs we elect to face them with. At the other end of the age scale, we can obviously affect the number of elderly persons as well as their circumstances by altering health programs, as we have so decisively chosen to do. A final source of jointness is that numbers themselves affect conditions. Some of these effects are largely inadvertent, as I've argued in regard to public schooling, and others seem to be very deliberate outcomes of the political process. It's useful to step back and ask whether the mixture of numbers and conditions that we've chosen is the one that best serves us. In regard to redistributions from the working-age population to the elderly, the answer is far from obvious. There is surely something to be said for a system in which things get better as we pass through life rather than worse. The great levelling off of age curves of psychological distress, suicide and income in the past two decades might simply reflect the fact that we have decided in some fundamental sense that we don't want to face futures that become continually bleaker. But let's be clear that the transfers from the working-age population to the elderly are also transfers away from children, since the working ages bear far more responsibility for childrearing than do the elderly. And let's also recognize that the sums involved are huge. Just the increase in federal expenditures on the elderly between 1977 and 1983, if distributed among the population under age 15, would come to well over $2,000 per child.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Entities:  

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6394374

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Demography        ISSN: 0070-3370


  5 in total

1.  The changing American family.

Authors:  A Thornton; D Freedman
Journal:  Popul Bull       Date:  1983-10

2.  Family structure and the mental health of children. Concurrent and longitudinal community-wide studies.

Authors:  S G Kellam; M E Ensminger; R J Turner
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1977-09

3.  Divorce: a child's perspective.

Authors:  E M Hetherington
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  1979-10

4.  Children and marital disruption: a replication and update.

Authors:  L L Bumpass
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1984-02

5.  A note on maritally-disrupted men's reports of child support in the June 1980 Current Population Survey.

Authors:  A Cherlin; J Griffith; J McCarthy
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1983-08
  5 in total
  39 in total

Review 1.  Going to extremes: family structure, children's well-being, and social science.

Authors:  A J Cherlin
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1999-11

2.  Maternal employment and time with children: dramatic change or surprising continuity?

Authors:  S M Bianchi
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2000-11

Review 3.  Is low fertility a twenty-first-century demographic crisis?

Authors:  S Philip Morgan
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2003-11

4.  Population policies in advanced societies: pronatalist and migration strategies.

Authors:  C Hohn
Journal:  Eur J Popul       Date:  1988-07

5.  The labour-market consequences of generational crowding.

Authors:  D E Bloom; R B Freeman; S D Korenman
Journal:  Eur J Popul       Date:  1988-05

6.  What's happening to the family? Interactions between demographic and institutional change.

Authors:  L L Bumpass
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1990-11

7.  Population dynamics: Social security, markets, and families.

Authors:  Andrew W Mason; Ronald D Lee; Sang-Hyop Lee
Journal:  Int Soc Secur Rev       Date:  2010-07

8.  Children and the Elderly: Wealth Inequality Among America's Dependents.

Authors:  Christina M Gibson-Davis; Christine Percheski
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2018-06

9.  Reproducing inequalities: luck, wallets, and the enduring effects of childhood health.

Authors:  Alberto Palloni
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2006-11

10.  The family in a changing world : A prolegomenon to an evolutionary analysis.

Authors:  R L Burgess
Journal:  Hum Nat       Date:  1994-06
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