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Subjective well-being of parents and childless people in older age in Germany
[journal article]
Abstract The growing number of older childless individuals in Western societies has raised concerns about their subjective well-being. In this study, we scrutinize the subjective well-being of parents and childless individuals aged 60 years and older. We examine subjective well-being as a multi-dimensional c... view more
The growing number of older childless individuals in Western societies has raised concerns about their subjective well-being. In this study, we scrutinize the subjective well-being of parents and childless individuals aged 60 years and older. We examine subjective well-being as a multi-dimensional construct encompassing life satisfaction, positive affect, and negative affect. Based on the value-of-children approach, we hypothesize that childless individuals experience lower subjective well-being than parents and that the disparity in well-being differs with age, gender, and the quality of the parent-child relationship. For our analysis, we use data from a nationally representative sample of adults aged 60 years and older (n = 10,682) drawn from the German Ageing Survey. Our findings from random effects regression models show that childless individuals report lower life satisfaction, less positive affect, and more negative affect than parents. These associations are larger for men than for women but do not vary significantly across age groups. Furthermore, our results suggest that the benefits of parenthood strongly depend on the quality of the parent-child relationship. Childless people report lower subjective well-being than parents with a close emotional bond with their children, but similar or even higher subjective well-being than parents with an emotionally distant parent-child relationship. In sum, our study indicates that childless people experience, on average, lower well-being across all three dimensions of subjective well-being in older age. However, under specific circumstances, childless individuals may fare better than parents.... view less
Keywords
parenthood; childlessness; satisfaction with life; well-being; old age; elderly; gender-specific factors; parent-child relationship; Federal Republic of Germany
Classification
Family Sociology, Sociology of Sexual Behavior
Gerontology
Free Keywords
DEAS, Deutscher Alterssurvey; Well-being
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Journal
Applied Research in Quality of Life (2024)
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11482-024-10376-z
ISSN
1871-2576
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed