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Allocating Public and Private Resources across Generations : Riding the Age Waves—Volume 2 /

Contributor(s): Gauthier, Anne H [editor.] | Chu, C. Y. Cyrus [editor.] | Tuljapurkar, Shripad [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: International Studies In Population: 3Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2006.Description: XIV, 308 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781402044816.Subject(s): Social sciences | Aging | Sociology | Demography | Social Sciences | Demography | Aging | Methodology of the Social Sciences | Sociology, generalDDC classification: 304.6 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Substitution and Substitutability: The Effects of Kin Availability on Intergenerational Transfers in Malawi -- Kinship Networks and Intergenerational Transfers -- Stability and Change in Patterns of Intergenerational Transfers in Taiwan -- Demographic Events and the Timing of Monetary Transfers: Some Evidence from Germany -- Maternal Coresidence and Contact: Evidence from Cross-National Surveys -- Son Preference, Marriage, and Intergenerational Transfer in Rural China -- Health and Labour-Force Participation of the Elderly in Taiwan -- Social Expenditures on Children and the Elderly in OECD Countries, 1980–1995: Shifting Allocations, Changing Needs -- Consequences of Educational Change for the Burden of Chronic Health Problems in the Population -- Effects of Changing Age Structure and Intergenerational Transfers on Patterns of Consumption and Saving -- Some Intergenerational Transfer Implications of Birth Fluctuations -- On Stochastic Generational Accounting.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: In rapidly industrializing countries, demographic changes continue to have significant effects on the well-being of individuals and families, and as aggregate human and financial capital. These effects may be analyzed in terms of inter-generational transfers of time, money, goods, and services. The chapters in this volume greatly develop our understanding of the nature and measurement of transfers, their motives and mechanisms, and their macro-level dimensions, especially in the context of demographic transitions. The chapters include original empirical analyses of datasets from some twenty countries taking the reader beyond the American context in order to test the applicability of some of the theories developed on the basis of American data. They extend the traditional analysis of inter-generational transfers by examining different types of transfers, namely goods, money, assets, time, co-residence and visits. Furthermore, the chapters go beyond the study of traditional parent – child transfers to examine transfers to kins and the bi-directionality of transfers.
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Substitution and Substitutability: The Effects of Kin Availability on Intergenerational Transfers in Malawi -- Kinship Networks and Intergenerational Transfers -- Stability and Change in Patterns of Intergenerational Transfers in Taiwan -- Demographic Events and the Timing of Monetary Transfers: Some Evidence from Germany -- Maternal Coresidence and Contact: Evidence from Cross-National Surveys -- Son Preference, Marriage, and Intergenerational Transfer in Rural China -- Health and Labour-Force Participation of the Elderly in Taiwan -- Social Expenditures on Children and the Elderly in OECD Countries, 1980–1995: Shifting Allocations, Changing Needs -- Consequences of Educational Change for the Burden of Chronic Health Problems in the Population -- Effects of Changing Age Structure and Intergenerational Transfers on Patterns of Consumption and Saving -- Some Intergenerational Transfer Implications of Birth Fluctuations -- On Stochastic Generational Accounting.

In rapidly industrializing countries, demographic changes continue to have significant effects on the well-being of individuals and families, and as aggregate human and financial capital. These effects may be analyzed in terms of inter-generational transfers of time, money, goods, and services. The chapters in this volume greatly develop our understanding of the nature and measurement of transfers, their motives and mechanisms, and their macro-level dimensions, especially in the context of demographic transitions. The chapters include original empirical analyses of datasets from some twenty countries taking the reader beyond the American context in order to test the applicability of some of the theories developed on the basis of American data. They extend the traditional analysis of inter-generational transfers by examining different types of transfers, namely goods, money, assets, time, co-residence and visits. Furthermore, the chapters go beyond the study of traditional parent – child transfers to examine transfers to kins and the bi-directionality of transfers.

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