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2020 Conference

May 18–20, 2020

Proposal authors can use this tool to see where they have been placed in the agenda for a Symposium, an Oral Session, or a Featured Research Session Poster.

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112 Understanding the Gendered Difference in Intergenerational Giving in China

Tuesday, May 19, 2020 at 8:30 AM–Thursday, May 21, 2020 at 6:30 PM CDT
Posters YouTube Videos
Key Words

intergenerational giving, Chinese parents, education, gender

Short Description

This study aims to understand: 1) Who is paying for students overseas? 2) What factors influence intergenerational giving in higher education? Three theoretical perspectives guide our thinking. The exchange perspective suggests that older generations support younger generations in the expectation of material return when aging. Altruism perceptive suggests that intergenerational giving usually flows from the better-off to the needier. Solidarity perspective suggests that emotional closeness is the foremost dimension in intergenerational support. In line with Confucius's ideology, Chinese society is more vigorous in differentiating men and women's traditional gender roles. Sons/grandsons are deemed to have a better income prospective, while daughters/granddaughters are expected gentler, nicer and closer to their parents and grandparents. These three theoretical perspectives provide conflicted guidance in understanding intergenerational giving in China. Under the exchange perspective, we may expect sons/grandsons to get more support, while altruism and solidarity perspectives suggest otherwise. Empirical evidence appears to be contradicted too. A further investigation of this topic is needed and our study meets this need.

First & Corresponding Author

Brin Xu, University of Maryland
Authors in the order to be printed

Brin Xu, Jinhee Kim

Additional Authors

Jinhee Kim, University of Maryland
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