@inbook{e4f32c14247d458c86536ac11caaa753,
title = "Intergenerational Resource Transfers as the Cement of Society: The Asymmetric Roles of Families and Policies",
abstract = "European societies transfer more per capita resources to children than to the elderly, once we go beyond mere public transfer data and also take into account intra-household private transfers by families. Mostly, these are resources parents spend on buying goods and services for their children, and, especially, the value of the time spent caring, rearing, and producing various household public goods. The size of net transfers given in active age in both directions is much higher once the value of private transfers and time transfers is incorporated. When thinking about what societies do (or do not) do in terms of inter-age transfers, we need a different statistical system that incorporates these intra-familial relations, as public transfer data alone offer a highly incomplete picture of what contemporary societies accomplish in terms of intergenerational transfers. Why, indeed, do we observe so little social policy for young families?",
keywords = "social policy, generations, resource transfers, human capital, age group reallocations",
author = "Pieter Vanhuysse and Gal, {Robert Ivan}",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
day = "10",
language = "English",
editor = "Daly, {Mary } and {Birgit Pfau-Effinger}, Birgit and Gilbert, {Neil } and Douglas Besharov",
booktitle = "International Handbook of Family Policy",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",
}