Working paper

Caregivers in the family

daughters, sons and social norms

Francesca Barigozzi, Helmuth Cremer, and Kerstin Roeder

Abstract

Daughters are the principal caregivers of their dependent parents. In this paper, we study long-term care (LTC) choices by bargaining families with mixed- or same-gender siblings. LTC care can be provided either informally by children, or formally at home or in an institution. A social norm implies that daughters suffer a psychological cost when they provide less informal care than the average child. We show that the laissez-faire (LF) and the utilitarian first-best (FB) differ for two reasons. First, because informal care imposes a negative externality on daughters via the social norm, too much informal care is provided in LF. Second, the weights children and parents have in the family bargaining problem might differ in general from their weights in social welfare. We show that the FB allocation can be achieved through a system of subsidies on formal home and institutional care. Except when children and parents have equal bargaining weights these subsidies are gender-specific and reflect Pigouvian as well as "paternalistic" considerations.

Keywords

Social norms; formal and informal LTC; daughters; sons;

JEL codes

  • D13: Household Production and Intrahousehold Allocation
  • H23: Externalities • Redistributive Effects • Environmental Taxes and Subsidies
  • H31: Household
  • I19: Other

Replaced by

Francesca Barigozzi, Helmuth Cremer, and Kerstin Roeder, Caregivers in the Family: Daughters, Sons and Social Norms, European Economic Review, vol. 130, n. 103589, November 2020.

Reference

Francesca Barigozzi, Helmuth Cremer, and Kerstin Roeder, Caregivers in the family: daughters, sons and social norms, TSE Working Paper, n. 17-823, June 2017.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 17-823, June 2017