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Childlessness and intergenerational transfers in later life

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Michaela KREYENFELD and Dirk KONIETZKA (eds), Childlessness in Europe : contexts, causes and consequences, Cham : Springer Open, 2017, Demographic research monographs, pp. 351-368
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ALBERTINI, Marco, KOHLI, Martin, Childlessness and intergenerational transfers in later life, in Michaela KREYENFELD and Dirk KONIETZKA (eds), Childlessness in Europe : contexts, causes and consequences, Cham : Springer Open, 2017, Demographic research monographs, pp. 351-368 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/61905
Abstract
Childlessness in later life has been attracting increased attention from researchers and policy makers. Yet a number of misconceptions about childlessness among the elderly remain, such as the claim that elderly childless people are mainly on the receiving end of intergenerational exchanges, or that they are a homogeneous group. Contrary to these assumptions, we find that elderly childless people give as well as receive, and that parental status is a continuum, ranging from full childlessness across several intermediary conditions to full current natural parenthood. In a study of the elderly population across 11 European countries, we show that non-parents make significant contributions to their social networks of family and friends through financial and time transfers, and that the latter in particular differ little from those of natural parents. The same applies to their participation in charitable and voluntary work. Different parental statuses are significantly associated with the various dimensions of giving and receiving. Social parents (i.e., people who have no natural children, but who have adopted, foster, or stepchildren) are shown to be much more similar to natural parents than to non-parents. Family recomposition thus does not seem to inhibit intergenerational exchanges, as long as social parents have sufficient contact with their non-natural social children. On the other hand, parents who have lost contact with their children – natural or otherwise – are likely to require more formal care in later life.
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First Online: 13 January 2017
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