Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China

<b>Background</b>: Studies in previous decades have shown that patterns of intergenerational coresidence in China have been diminishing. However, few studies have documented the level of intergenerational coresidence for a wide range of ages. Furthermore, most studies on the topic are ba...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yiqing Gan, Eric Fong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research 2020-07-01
Series:Demographic Research
Online Access:https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol43/12/
id doaj-af5b7032a5394628ad95467df3f32687
record_format Article
spelling doaj-af5b7032a5394628ad95467df3f326872020-11-25T03:39:30ZengMax Planck Institute for Demographic ResearchDemographic Research1435-98712020-07-01431210.4054/DemRes.2020.43.124834Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban ChinaYiqing Gan0Eric Fong1Chinese University of Hong KongUniversity of Hong Kong<b>Background</b>: Studies in previous decades have shown that patterns of intergenerational coresidence in China have been diminishing. However, few studies have documented the level of intergenerational coresidence for a wide range of ages. Furthermore, most studies on the topic are based on data collected more than 10 years ago. <b>Objective</b>: In this study, we document the intergenerational coresidence patterns of a wide range of ages, from 25 to 60, in urban China. We employ updated national data collected in 2013 that covers 2,585 counties in China. <b>Methods</b>: We conducted three sets of analysis. The first set includes all cases. For the second set, we kept cases with at least one parent living in the same city and conducted the same analysis as in the first set. The dependent variable of these two sets of analysis is whether the adult child coresides with at least one parent. The third set includes only those adult children who do not live with their parents. We explore the probability of adult children at different ages living in the same city as their parents. <b>Results</b>: There is a U-shaped relationship between the age of adult children and the predicted probability of coresidence with parents. The predicted probability of intergenerational coresidence is higher among younger and older adult children, although it remains low at all ages. More importantly, among those living separately, we found a positive linear relationship between the age of the adult child and the predicted probability of living in the same city. <b>Contribution</b>: The findings suggest that coresidence of parents and adult children is no longer a dominant intergenerational living arrangement pattern in urban China. Living separately but close has become a dominant pattern.https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol43/12/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yiqing Gan
Eric Fong
spellingShingle Yiqing Gan
Eric Fong
Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
Demographic Research
author_facet Yiqing Gan
Eric Fong
author_sort Yiqing Gan
title Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
title_short Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
title_full Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
title_fullStr Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
title_full_unstemmed Living separately but living close: Coresidence of adult children and parents in urban China
title_sort living separately but living close: coresidence of adult children and parents in urban china
publisher Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
series Demographic Research
issn 1435-9871
publishDate 2020-07-01
description <b>Background</b>: Studies in previous decades have shown that patterns of intergenerational coresidence in China have been diminishing. However, few studies have documented the level of intergenerational coresidence for a wide range of ages. Furthermore, most studies on the topic are based on data collected more than 10 years ago. <b>Objective</b>: In this study, we document the intergenerational coresidence patterns of a wide range of ages, from 25 to 60, in urban China. We employ updated national data collected in 2013 that covers 2,585 counties in China. <b>Methods</b>: We conducted three sets of analysis. The first set includes all cases. For the second set, we kept cases with at least one parent living in the same city and conducted the same analysis as in the first set. The dependent variable of these two sets of analysis is whether the adult child coresides with at least one parent. The third set includes only those adult children who do not live with their parents. We explore the probability of adult children at different ages living in the same city as their parents. <b>Results</b>: There is a U-shaped relationship between the age of adult children and the predicted probability of coresidence with parents. The predicted probability of intergenerational coresidence is higher among younger and older adult children, although it remains low at all ages. More importantly, among those living separately, we found a positive linear relationship between the age of the adult child and the predicted probability of living in the same city. <b>Contribution</b>: The findings suggest that coresidence of parents and adult children is no longer a dominant intergenerational living arrangement pattern in urban China. Living separately but close has become a dominant pattern.
url https://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol43/12/
work_keys_str_mv AT yiqinggan livingseparatelybutlivingclosecoresidenceofadultchildrenandparentsinurbanchina
AT ericfong livingseparatelybutlivingclosecoresidenceofadultchildrenandparentsinurbanchina
_version_ 1724538423436378112