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Is There a Rejuvenating Effect of (Grand)Childcare? A Longitudinal Study on German Data
[Does grandchild care influence grandparents’ self-rated health? Evidence from a fixed effects approach]

Author

Listed:
  • Valeria Bordone
  • Bruno Arpino

Abstract

ObjectivesProvision of grandchild care has been found to be associated with a youthful subjective age. Yet, previous studies on this topic were cross-sectional and ignored the increasing proportions of older people growing old without the opportunity to become a grandparent. This study investigates the effects of childcare to grandchildren and to other children on subjective age using panel data.MethodsWe exploit the longitudinal nature of data from the German Ageing Survey (DEAS) to examine the association between grandparental childcare and care to other children with subjective age, using fixed-effects regression analyses on a sample of 50–85 years old individuals (men: N = 11,151; n = 3,984; women: N = 10,687; n = 3,746, where N is the number of observations and n is the number of individuals).ResultsThe results from cross-sectional analyses show a “rejuvenating effect” of provision of both types of childcare in later life, especially for women. However, longitudinal analyses find very small and statistically insignificant effects.DiscussionWe show for the first time that both grandchild care and childcare outside the grandparent–grandchild relationship are associated with a youthful subjective age for older people. However, these associations are likely due to selection effects, that is, unobserved characteristics of people that make them more likely to engage in childcare and are also associated with subjective age. Our results warn against causal interpretation of associations found in previous studies, but also open up new research questions on the role played by childcare other than to grandchildren.

Suggested Citation

  • Valeria Bordone & Bruno Arpino, 2022. "Is There a Rejuvenating Effect of (Grand)Childcare? A Longitudinal Study on German Data [Does grandchild care influence grandparents’ self-rated health? Evidence from a fixed effects approach]," The Journals of Gerontology: Series B, The Gerontological Society of America, vol. 77(2), pages 446-455.
  • Handle: RePEc:oup:geronb:v:77:y:2022:i:2:p:446-455.
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