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Does Informal Eldercare Impede Women's Employment? The Case of European Welfare States

Abstract European states vary in eldercare policies and in gendered norms of family care, and this study uses these variations to gain insight into the importance of macro-level factors for the work–care relationship. Using advanced panel data methods on European Community Household Panel (ECHP) data for 1994–2001, this study finds women's employment to be negatively associated with informal caregiving to the elderly across the European Union. For the countries included in the study, the effects of informal caregiving seem to be more negative in Southern Europe, less negative in Nordic countries, and in between these extremes in Central Europe. This study explains that since eldercare is a choice in countries with more formal care and less pronounced gendered care norms, the weaker impact of eldercare on women's employment in these countries has to do with the lesser degree of coercion in the caring decision.

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Additional Titles
Feminist Economics

Key Information

Type of Reference
Jour
ISBN/ISSN
1354-5701
Resource Database
Miscellaneous
Publication Year
2011
Edition
Reprint Edition
Issue Number
2
Volume Number
17
Start Page
121-144