Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?

BACKGROUND Existing research on intergenerational transfers has focused on income and wealth as the predominant determinants of the provision of financial assistance to adult children (Albertini, Kohli, and Vogel 2006; Zissimopoulos and Smith 2010; Albertini and Radl 2012). Yet previous models of in...

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Main Author: Thomas Emery
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research 2013-08-01
Series:Demographic Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol29/10/
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spelling doaj-ccd79d3001144e9dabaf12941e5365362020-11-24T23:38:58ZengMax Planck Institute for Demographic ResearchDemographic Research1435-98712013-08-012910Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?Thomas EmeryBACKGROUND Existing research on intergenerational transfers has focused on income and wealth as the predominant determinants of the provision of financial assistance to adult children (Albertini, Kohli, and Vogel 2006; Zissimopoulos and Smith 2010; Albertini and Radl 2012). Yet previous models of intergenerational transfers underestimated the effect of family size due to the effect of birth order and inappropriate research design. OBJECTIVE This paper aims to more accurately describe the relationship between family size and intergenerational financial transfers in Europe. In developing a more appropriate theoretical and empirical understanding of intergenerational behaviour by borrowing findings from other areas of family studies, this paper explores the issues involved in the complex analysis of cross generational issues such as sampling, diverse and complex family forms, and unobserved family- and individual-level heterogeneity. METHODS Using multilevel methods to nest individual children in their extended families, this paper analyses data from the Survey for Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, and concludes that family size and birth order are essential for understanding intergenerational transfers. Logit and Tobit models are used to predict transfer occurrence and amount, and therefore avoid bias estimates found with OLS in existing research. RESULTS The analysis suggests that an only child is more than four times as likely to receive financial assistance as someone in a four-child family. This means that the maximum effect of family size is more than twice that of parental income. A separate and independent effect of birth order is also identified, which suggests that the oldest in a four-child family is twice as likely to receive financial assistance as their youngest sibling. CONCLUSIONS The policy implications of this finding are significant in the context of an ageing society and demographic change, suggesting a shift in focus from financial to demographic models of intergenerational dependency. The conclusions argue for the use of multilevel modelling in the future analysis of intergenerational transfers. Doing so may help refocus intergenerational transfers research onto issues of family structure and circumstance, rather than the direct transfer of resources from one generation to the next, as described by altruistic and exchange models of transfer behaviour. http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol29/10/birth orderfamily sizeintergenerationallogitmultilevelsharetobittransfers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Emery
spellingShingle Thomas Emery
Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
Demographic Research
birth order
family size
intergenerational
logit
multilevel
share
tobit
transfers
author_facet Thomas Emery
author_sort Thomas Emery
title Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
title_short Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
title_full Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
title_fullStr Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
title_full_unstemmed Intergenerational transfers and European families: Does the number of siblings matter?
title_sort intergenerational transfers and european families: does the number of siblings matter?
publisher Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
series Demographic Research
issn 1435-9871
publishDate 2013-08-01
description BACKGROUND Existing research on intergenerational transfers has focused on income and wealth as the predominant determinants of the provision of financial assistance to adult children (Albertini, Kohli, and Vogel 2006; Zissimopoulos and Smith 2010; Albertini and Radl 2012). Yet previous models of intergenerational transfers underestimated the effect of family size due to the effect of birth order and inappropriate research design. OBJECTIVE This paper aims to more accurately describe the relationship between family size and intergenerational financial transfers in Europe. In developing a more appropriate theoretical and empirical understanding of intergenerational behaviour by borrowing findings from other areas of family studies, this paper explores the issues involved in the complex analysis of cross generational issues such as sampling, diverse and complex family forms, and unobserved family- and individual-level heterogeneity. METHODS Using multilevel methods to nest individual children in their extended families, this paper analyses data from the Survey for Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe, and concludes that family size and birth order are essential for understanding intergenerational transfers. Logit and Tobit models are used to predict transfer occurrence and amount, and therefore avoid bias estimates found with OLS in existing research. RESULTS The analysis suggests that an only child is more than four times as likely to receive financial assistance as someone in a four-child family. This means that the maximum effect of family size is more than twice that of parental income. A separate and independent effect of birth order is also identified, which suggests that the oldest in a four-child family is twice as likely to receive financial assistance as their youngest sibling. CONCLUSIONS The policy implications of this finding are significant in the context of an ageing society and demographic change, suggesting a shift in focus from financial to demographic models of intergenerational dependency. The conclusions argue for the use of multilevel modelling in the future analysis of intergenerational transfers. Doing so may help refocus intergenerational transfers research onto issues of family structure and circumstance, rather than the direct transfer of resources from one generation to the next, as described by altruistic and exchange models of transfer behaviour.
topic birth order
family size
intergenerational
logit
multilevel
share
tobit
transfers
url http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol29/10/
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasemery intergenerationaltransfersandeuropeanfamiliesdoesthenumberofsiblingsmatter
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