Abstract :
Inter-vivos financial transfers from older parents to their adult children are widespread
in the United States. Childless people may simply make fewer transfers.
On the other hand, because their giving is away from children, their decisions are
more complex in that there are multiple potential targets of approximately equal
attractiveness. Using data for 1996 to 2004 from the United States Health and
Retirement Study, this article examines the differences between parents and childless
older people in financial transfers to people other than their children. The results
show that, overall, parents tend to give less than the childless to other people.
However, some variation is found depending on the nature and target of the gift.
Having children does not affect giving to charities but does reduce the prevalence
of giving to parents, but not nearly as much as the reduction in giving to family
and friends. It can therefore be concluded, first that there is little substitution
between personal and impersonal transfers ; secondly, that the sense of obligation
to parents is not reduced by giving to charities or to children; and thirdly, that
having children reduces the need to satisfy the desire for family and social ties by
means of links to family and friends.
Keywords :
MICHAEL HURD , Bequests , inter-vivos transfers , Altruism , life-cycle