Ma Sen, Wen Fangqi
Department of Economics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 214 David Kinley Hall, 1407 W. Gregory, Urbana, IL, 61801, USA.
Department of Sociology, New York University, New York, NY, USA.
Demography. 2016 Jun;53(3):623-47. doi: 10.1007/s13524-016-0468-8.
Coresidence between elderly parents and their married adult children is common in East Asian societies. We analyze theoretically and empirically with which adult child parents coreside when the extended family has multiple adult children, and we show that this decision-making process can be rationalized. Specifically, we find evidence that suggests division of labor among family members through the choice of coresidence. Theoretically, we show that when parents can help children with housework, they will coreside with higher-educated children whose opportunity cost of housework is higher. On the other hand, when parents need help from children in housework labor, they will coreside with lower-educated children, whose opportunity cost of housework is lower. By adopting a data set containing information on parents and their married adult children, we find that our two hypotheses are supported among families from rural China. The probability of coresidence is positively associated with relative education of the children when parents can provide help but negatively associated with education when parents need help.
在东亚社会,老年父母与已婚成年子女同住的情况很常见。我们从理论和实证两方面分析,当大家庭中有多个成年子女时,父母会与哪个成年子女同住,并且我们表明这一决策过程是可以合理化的。具体而言,我们发现有证据表明,通过同住选择可以实现家庭成员之间的分工。从理论上讲,我们表明当父母能够帮助子女做家务时,他们会与家务机会成本较高的高学历子女同住。另一方面,当父母需要子女帮忙做家务时,他们会与家务机会成本较低的低学历子女同住。通过采用一个包含父母及其已婚成年子女信息的数据集,我们发现中国农村家庭支持我们的两个假设。当父母能够提供帮助时,同住的概率与子女的相对教育程度呈正相关,而当父母需要帮助时,同住概率与教育程度呈负相关。