Dilemmas of an Aging Society: Family and State Responsibilities for Intergenerational Care in Taiwan

In an aging society with a declining birthrate, there are more and more elderly to care for and fewer adult children to provide them care; these adult children, and the state, are forced to weigh the costs of eldercare against the cost of child care. In Taiwan, these dilemmas may be particularly acu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of family issues 2019-10, Vol.40 (14), p.1912-1936
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Ju-Ping, Yi, Chin-Chun
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container_end_page 1936
container_issue 14
container_start_page 1912
container_title Journal of family issues
container_volume 40
creator Lin, Ju-Ping
Yi, Chin-Chun
description In an aging society with a declining birthrate, there are more and more elderly to care for and fewer adult children to provide them care; these adult children, and the state, are forced to weigh the costs of eldercare against the cost of child care. In Taiwan, these dilemmas may be particularly acute, given the persistence of Confucian norms of filial piety and the extended family structures. In this study, we examine the attitudes of Taiwanese people toward the relative responsibilities of both adult children and the welfare state for eldercare and child care. Data were taken from the Taiwan Social Change Survey in 2011. Using latent class analysis to develop a typology of attitudes toward intergenerational care responsibilities, we found four types: (a) Family cares for elders and children, (b) family cares mainly for children, (c) cooperation between family and government, (d) government cares for the elderly. Findings show that an individual’s attitudes toward welfare state policies are significantly related to both self-interest and sociocultural norms as well as intergenerational family interactions. In Taiwan, filial norms and the quality of family interaction significantly influence attitudes toward the division of intergenerational care responsibilities.
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source Sociological Abstracts; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Adult children
Aging
Attitudes
Child care
Extended family
Families & family life
Family (Sociological Unit)
Filial responsibility
Intergenerational relationships
Latent class analysis
Older Adults
Older people
Self interest
Social change
Sociocultural factors
State Policy
Typology
Welfare state
title Dilemmas of an Aging Society: Family and State Responsibilities for Intergenerational Care in Taiwan
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