China has experienced the verticalization of family structure. It has changed the support between aging parents and adult children among middle-aged adults who are often in the position of providing support to older and younger generations (sandwiched situation). Using data from China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we studied the support choice of middle-aged people. Results show that middle-aged people who provided support to older generations were also more likely to provide support to younger generations. Couples of whom neither spouse has a brother were less likely to financially support their parents only and provide instrumental support to their children only than couples of whom both spouses have brothers. Couples of whom ...
Using data from the 1989 survey of noninstitutionalized impaired elderly and their caregivers in Sha...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...
The patriarchal structure of the traditional Chinese family suggests that sons, more than daughters,...
China's aging population is increasing at an unprecedented rate and along with increasing life expec...
Drawing on the 2002 wave of the Chinese Survey of Family Dynamics and the 2002 wave of the Chinese L...
With increasing life expectancy, changes in family structure and, most recently, the relaxation of t...
For Chinese families, coresidence with elderly parents is both a form of support and a moderator of ...
Declining fertility in China has raised concerns about elderly support, especially when public suppo...
China’s ageing process is accelerating as the large birth cohorts of the 1950s and 1960s enter their...
This article explores the links between old age support and the characteristics of both parents and ...
This dissertation is an empirical study of the pattern of old age support of service and economic ty...
The People\u27s Republic of China has the largest population of older persons of any country in the ...
Journal ArticleThis paper examines a) whether rates of coresidence between older adults and their ad...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
Younger people being less supportive to their elderly has been interpreted as shifting away from the...
Using data from the 1989 survey of noninstitutionalized impaired elderly and their caregivers in Sha...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...
The patriarchal structure of the traditional Chinese family suggests that sons, more than daughters,...
China's aging population is increasing at an unprecedented rate and along with increasing life expec...
Drawing on the 2002 wave of the Chinese Survey of Family Dynamics and the 2002 wave of the Chinese L...
With increasing life expectancy, changes in family structure and, most recently, the relaxation of t...
For Chinese families, coresidence with elderly parents is both a form of support and a moderator of ...
Declining fertility in China has raised concerns about elderly support, especially when public suppo...
China’s ageing process is accelerating as the large birth cohorts of the 1950s and 1960s enter their...
This article explores the links between old age support and the characteristics of both parents and ...
This dissertation is an empirical study of the pattern of old age support of service and economic ty...
The People\u27s Republic of China has the largest population of older persons of any country in the ...
Journal ArticleThis paper examines a) whether rates of coresidence between older adults and their ad...
Background: The life course experiences of those born in China from the late 1950s to early 1970s ha...
Younger people being less supportive to their elderly has been interpreted as shifting away from the...
Using data from the 1989 survey of noninstitutionalized impaired elderly and their caregivers in Sha...
This paper examines how parent-child relationships vary against the backdrop of socioeconomic inequa...
The patriarchal structure of the traditional Chinese family suggests that sons, more than daughters,...