The dynamics of social care and employment in mid-life
The dynamics of social care and employment in mid-life
This study investigates the relationship between the provision of informal care to older parents/parents-in-law and the employment status of adult children in mid-life. The study analyses unique panel data for a cohort of individuals born in 1958 in Britain, focusing on respondents at risk of providing care (i.e. with at least one surviving parent/parent-in-law) and in employment at 50. Logistic regression is used to investigate the impact of caring at 50 and 55 on employment status at 55, controlling for socio-demographic characteristics, the respondent's health status and their partner's employment status. Separate models examine (a) the likelihood of exiting the labour force versus continuing work, and (b) amongst those continuing in work, the likelihood of reducing hours of employment. Different types of care (personal, basic and instrumental support) are distinguished, along with hours of caring. The results highlight that providing care for more personal tasks, and for a higher number of hours, are associated with exiting employment for both men and women carers. In contrast, the negative impact of more intense care-giving on reducing working hours was significant only for men – suggesting that women may juggle intensive care commitments alongside work or leave work altogether. Facilitating women and men to combine paid work and parental care in mid-life will be increasingly important in the context of rising longevity.
informal care, parental care, National Child Development Study, labour force participation
381-408
Gomez-leon, Madelin
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Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Falkingham, Jane
8df36615-1547-4a6d-ad55-aa9496e85519
Vlachantoni, Athina
06a52fbb-f2a0-4c81-9fbc-d6efc736c6cb
2 January 2019
Gomez-leon, Madelin
44f79aad-ff8a-4c16-ae07-23e6fbb7ee9b
Evandrou, Maria
cd2210ea-9625-44d7-b0f4-fc0721a25d28
Falkingham, Jane
8df36615-1547-4a6d-ad55-aa9496e85519
Vlachantoni, Athina
06a52fbb-f2a0-4c81-9fbc-d6efc736c6cb
Gomez-leon, Madelin, Evandrou, Maria, Falkingham, Jane and Vlachantoni, Athina
(2019)
The dynamics of social care and employment in mid-life.
Ageing & Society, 39 (2), .
(doi:10.1017/S0144686X17000964).
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between the provision of informal care to older parents/parents-in-law and the employment status of adult children in mid-life. The study analyses unique panel data for a cohort of individuals born in 1958 in Britain, focusing on respondents at risk of providing care (i.e. with at least one surviving parent/parent-in-law) and in employment at 50. Logistic regression is used to investigate the impact of caring at 50 and 55 on employment status at 55, controlling for socio-demographic characteristics, the respondent's health status and their partner's employment status. Separate models examine (a) the likelihood of exiting the labour force versus continuing work, and (b) amongst those continuing in work, the likelihood of reducing hours of employment. Different types of care (personal, basic and instrumental support) are distinguished, along with hours of caring. The results highlight that providing care for more personal tasks, and for a higher number of hours, are associated with exiting employment for both men and women carers. In contrast, the negative impact of more intense care-giving on reducing working hours was significant only for men – suggesting that women may juggle intensive care commitments alongside work or leave work altogether. Facilitating women and men to combine paid work and parental care in mid-life will be increasingly important in the context of rising longevity.
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Dynamics of social care and employment in mid-life
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 August 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 September 2017
Published date: 2 January 2019
Keywords:
informal care, parental care, National Child Development Study, labour force participation
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 414455
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414455
ISSN: 0144-686X
PURE UUID: 821ad13d-ce87-47d0-92d2-12800d9b7ac5
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Date deposited: 29 Sep 2017 16:31
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:45
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Author:
Madelin Gomez-leon
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