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What drives national differences in intensive grandparental childcare in Europe?

What drives national differences in intensive grandparental childcare in Europe?
What drives national differences in intensive grandparental childcare in Europe?
Objectives.
Grandparents play an important role in looking after grandchildren, although intensive grandparental childcare varies considerably across Europe. Few studies have explicitly investigated the extent to which such cross-national variations are associated with national level differences in individual demographic and socio-economic distributions along with contextual-structural and cultural factors (e.g., variations in female labor force participation, childcare provision, and cultural attitudes).

Methods.
We used multilevel models to examine associations between intensive grandparental childcare and contextual-structural and cultural factors, after controlling for grandparent, parent, and child characteristics using nationally representative data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe.

Results.
Even controlling for cross-national differences in demographic and socio-economic distributions, contextual-structural factors play an important role in explaining grandparental childcare variations in Europe. In particular, higher levels of intensive grandparental childcare are found in countries with low labor force participation among younger and older women, and low formal childcare provision, where mothers in paid work largely rely on grandparental support on an almost daily basis.

Discussion.
Encouraging older women to remain in paid work is likely to have an impact on grandchild care which in turn may affect mothers’ employment, particularly in Southern European countries where there is little formal childcare.
141 - 153
Gessa, Giorgio Di
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Glaser, Karen
5c37a936-d46c-47a6-b8c4-0c57c86c02b5
Price, Debora
95753d10-fd8e-4233-b003-cf21b775ca75
Ribe, Eloi
d31b8276-457e-4e4b-8359-f454e5a4777c
Tinker, Anthea
11c47afd-d499-4dc2-b9d8-4137853aaec6
Gessa, Giorgio Di
0461d9e1-8451-415e-9bd6-c82e569cae52
Glaser, Karen
5c37a936-d46c-47a6-b8c4-0c57c86c02b5
Price, Debora
95753d10-fd8e-4233-b003-cf21b775ca75
Ribe, Eloi
d31b8276-457e-4e4b-8359-f454e5a4777c
Tinker, Anthea
11c47afd-d499-4dc2-b9d8-4137853aaec6

Gessa, Giorgio Di, Glaser, Karen, Price, Debora, Ribe, Eloi and Tinker, Anthea (2016) What drives national differences in intensive grandparental childcare in Europe? Journals of Gerontology: Series B: Psychological sciences and social sciences, 71 (1), 141 - 153. (doi:10.1093/geronb/gbv007).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives.
Grandparents play an important role in looking after grandchildren, although intensive grandparental childcare varies considerably across Europe. Few studies have explicitly investigated the extent to which such cross-national variations are associated with national level differences in individual demographic and socio-economic distributions along with contextual-structural and cultural factors (e.g., variations in female labor force participation, childcare provision, and cultural attitudes).

Methods.
We used multilevel models to examine associations between intensive grandparental childcare and contextual-structural and cultural factors, after controlling for grandparent, parent, and child characteristics using nationally representative data from the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe.

Results.
Even controlling for cross-national differences in demographic and socio-economic distributions, contextual-structural factors play an important role in explaining grandparental childcare variations in Europe. In particular, higher levels of intensive grandparental childcare are found in countries with low labor force participation among younger and older women, and low formal childcare provision, where mothers in paid work largely rely on grandparental support on an almost daily basis.

Discussion.
Encouraging older women to remain in paid work is likely to have an impact on grandchild care which in turn may affect mothers’ employment, particularly in Southern European countries where there is little formal childcare.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2015
Published date: 16 March 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506407
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506407
PURE UUID: f0a0af31-b450-480c-8b01-b671c1bc747b
ORCID for Eloi Ribe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7737-1983

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Date deposited: 06 Nov 2025 17:32
Last modified: 08 Nov 2025 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Giorgio Di Gessa
Author: Karen Glaser
Author: Debora Price
Author: Eloi Ribe ORCID iD
Author: Anthea Tinker

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