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Inter-generational family support provided by older people in Indonesia

Inter-generational family support provided by older people in Indonesia
Inter-generational family support provided by older people in Indonesia
Most social research on ageing in Asia has focused on the support provided by adult children to their parents, and thereby suggests that as a matter of course older people are in need of support. This paper offers a different perspective. Drawing on ethnographic and quantitative data from a village in East Java, it examines the extent of older people's dependence on others and highlights the material and practical contributions that they make to their families. It is shown that only a minority of older people are reliant on children or grandchildren for their daily survival. In the majority of cases, the net flow of inter-generational support is either downwards – from old to young – or balanced. Far from merely assisting with childcare and domestic tasks, older people are often the economic pillars of multi-generational families. Pension and agricultural incomes serve to secure the livelihoods of whole family networks, and the accumulated wealth of older parents is crucial for launching children into economic independence and underwriting their risks. Parental generosity does not generally elicit commensurate reciprocal support when it is needed, leaving many people vulnerable towards the end of their lives.
family support, inter-generational relations, asia, dependency, pensions, grandparents, reciprocity, ethnography
0144-686X
497-530
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711
Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth
b10e106a-4d5d-4f41-a7d2-9549ba425711

Schröder-Butterfill, Elisabeth (2004) Inter-generational family support provided by older people in Indonesia. Ageing & Society, 24 (4), 497-530. (doi:10.1017/S0144686X0400234X).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Most social research on ageing in Asia has focused on the support provided by adult children to their parents, and thereby suggests that as a matter of course older people are in need of support. This paper offers a different perspective. Drawing on ethnographic and quantitative data from a village in East Java, it examines the extent of older people's dependence on others and highlights the material and practical contributions that they make to their families. It is shown that only a minority of older people are reliant on children or grandchildren for their daily survival. In the majority of cases, the net flow of inter-generational support is either downwards – from old to young – or balanced. Far from merely assisting with childcare and domestic tasks, older people are often the economic pillars of multi-generational families. Pension and agricultural incomes serve to secure the livelihoods of whole family networks, and the accumulated wealth of older parents is crucial for launching children into economic independence and underwriting their risks. Parental generosity does not generally elicit commensurate reciprocal support when it is needed, leaving many people vulnerable towards the end of their lives.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: family support, inter-generational relations, asia, dependency, pensions, grandparents, reciprocity, ethnography
Organisations: Social Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 42806
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42806
ISSN: 0144-686X
PURE UUID: 3930ce40-717b-4f22-83c6-f9d48dbf5987
ORCID for Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5071-8710

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Jan 2007
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:52

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