Female employment and elderly care: the role of care policies and culture in 21 European countries
Naldini, Manuela ; Pavolini, Emmanuele ; Solera, Cristina
2016
30
4
August
607-630
elder care ; employment ; long term care ; women ; work-life balance
Social protection - Health policy
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0950017015625602
English
Bibliogr.
"To what extent and in what ways do welfare state policies and cultural values affect the employment patterns of mid-life women with care responsibilities toward a frail parent? The study draws on Eurobarometer micro-data integrated with country-level information to respond to this question. Performing a multilevel analysis across 21 European countries, it considers macro factors that influence the decisions of mid-life women to give up or reduce paid work in order to care for a frail elderly parent. The results show that, while the overall level of expenditure on long-term care is not influential, settings characterized by limited formal care services, and strong norms with regard to intergenerational obligations, have a negative impact on women's attachment to the labour market. Policies and cultural factors also influence the extent to which women are polarized: in more defamilialized countries, regardless of their level of education, female carers rarely reduce their level of employment."
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