Lin Zhiyong, Pei Xiaomei
Department of Sociology, Maryland Population Research Center, University of Maryland, College Park, USA
Department of Sociology, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Int J Aging Hum Dev. 2016 Jul;83(2):108-27. doi: 10.1177/0091415016647728. Epub 2016 May 9.
This study examines how parental investments on children affect elderly support, and how this effect is contingent on emotional closeness or parental authority. Data collected from 770 elderly parents residing in rural China were analyzed. We gathered dichotomous data for (a) whether parents invested on their children via financial or instrumental means (i.e., parental investments) and (b) whether parents reported closeness to their children (i.e., emotional closeness) and whether children respected them (i.e., parental authority). We examined the relation between these variables and children's elderly support (financial, instrumental, and emotional). We tested models in two ways, one examining the direct effect of investments, and another testing the interactions between investments and closeness or authority. We first found that investments were not directly associated with elderly support, although the closeness and authority were. Additionally, the association between investments and support was found within parents who reported authority or closeness with their children.
本研究考察了父母对子女的投资如何影响对老年人的赡养,以及这种影响如何取决于情感亲密度或父母权威。我们分析了从居住在中国农村的770位老年父母那里收集的数据。我们收集了二分数据,内容包括:(a) 父母是否通过经济或工具性方式对子女进行投资(即父母投资);(b) 父母是否报告与子女关系亲密(即情感亲密度)以及子女是否尊重他们(即父母权威)。我们考察了这些变量与子女对老年人赡养(经济、工具性和情感方面)之间的关系。我们用两种方式对模型进行了检验,一种检验投资的直接影响,另一种检验投资与亲密度或权威之间的相互作用。我们首先发现,投资与对老年人的赡养并无直接关联,不过亲密度和权威与赡养有关。此外,在报告与子女有权威关系或亲密关系的父母中,发现了投资与赡养之间的关联。