Volume 27 - Article 27 | Pages 775–834
Intergenerational Transfers in the Era of HIV/AIDS: Evidence from Rural Malawi
By Iliana Kohler, Hans-Peter Kohler, Phil Anglewicz, Jere Behrman
Abstract
Background: Intergenerational transfer patterns in sub-Saharan Africa are poorly understood, despite the alleged importance of support networks to ameliorate the complex implications of the HIV/AIDS epidemic for families.
Objective: There is a considerable need for research on intergenerational support networks and transfers to better understand the mechanisms through which extended families cope with the HIV/AIDS epidemic and potentially alleviate some of ist consequences in sub-Saharan Africa, and to comprehend how transfers respond—or not—to perceptions about own and other family members’ health.
Methods: Using the 2008 round of the Malawi Longitudinal Study of Families and Health (MLSFH), we estimate the age patterns and the multiple directions of financial and non-financial transfer flows in rural Malawi - from prime-aged respondents to their elderly parents and adult children age 15 and up. We also estimate the social, demographic and economic correlates of financial and non-financial transfers of financial intergenerational transfers in this context.
Results: Our findings are that: (1) intergenerational financial and non-financial transfers are widespread and a key characteristic of family relationships in rural Malawi; (2) downward and upward transfers are importantly constrained and determined by the availability of transfer partners (parents or adult children); (3) financial net transfers are strongly age-patterned and the middle generations are net-providers of transfers; (4) non-financial transfers are based on mutual assistance rather than reallocation of resources; and (5) intergenerational transfers are generally not related to health status, including HIV positive status.
Author's Affiliation
- Iliana Kohler - University of Pennsylvania, United States of America EMAIL
- Hans-Peter Kohler - University of Pennsylvania, United States of America EMAIL
- Phil Anglewicz - Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, United States of America EMAIL
- Jere Behrman - University of Pennsylvania, United States of America EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Marital dissolutions and changes in mental health: Evidence from rural Malawi
Volume 44 - Article 41
The Malawi Diffusion and Ideational Change Project 2004-06: Data collection, data quality, and analysis of attrition
Volume 20 - Article 21
Overestimating HIV infection:: The construction and accuracy of subjective probabilities of HIV infection in rural Malawi
Volume 20 - Article 6
A summary of Special Collection 1: Social Interactions and HIV/AIDS in Rural Africa
Volume 9 - Article 12
Attrition in Longitudinal Household Survey Data: Some Tests for Three Developing-Country Samples
Volume 5 - Article 4
Frailty Modelling for Adult and Old Age Mortality: The Application of a Modified DeMoivre Hazard Function to Sex Differentials in Mortality
Volume 3 - Article 8
Empirical Assessments of Social Networks, Fertility and Family Planning Programs: Nonlinearities and their Implications
Volume 3 - Article 7
Introduction to "Research on Demographic Aspects of HIV/AIDS in Rural Africa"
Special Collection 1 - Article 1
Predictive utility of key family planning indicators on dynamic contraceptive outcomes: Results from longitudinal surveys in Burkina Faso, Kenya, Uganda, and Côte d'Ivoire
Volume 50 - Article 45
Does the fulfillment of contraceptive method preferences affect contraceptive continuation? Evidence from urban Kenya, Nigeria, and Senegal
Volume 50 - Article 5
Shocks and migration in Malawi
Volume 38 - Article 14
The population-level impact of public-sector antiretroviral therapy rollout on adult mortality in rural Malawi
Volume 36 - Article 37
HIV/AIDS and time allocation in rural Malawi
Volume 24 - Article 27
Out of Sync? Demographic and other social science research on health conditions in developing countries
Volume 24 - Article 2
The Likoma Network Study: Context, data collection and initial results
Volume 21 - Article 15
Subjective expectations in the context of HIV/AIDS in Malawi
Volume 20 - Article 31
Educational differences in all-cause mortality by marital status: Evidence from Bulgaria, Finland and the United States
Volume 19 - Article 60
Comparative mortality levels among selected species of captive animals
Volume 15 - Article 14
The Fertility Pattern of Twins and the General Population Compared: Evidence from Danish Cohorts 1945-64
Volume 6 - Article 14
Integrated Information System for Demographic Statistics 'ESGRAON-TDS' in Bulgaria
Volume 6 - Article 12
Tempo-Adjusted Period Parity Progression Measures:: Assessing the Implications of Delayed Childbearing for Cohort Fertility in Sweden, the Netherlands and Spain
Volume 6 - Article 7
Tempo-Adjusted Period Parity Progression Measures, Fertility Postponement and Completed Cohort Fertility
Volume 6 - Article 6
Gender Preferences for Children in Europe: Empirical Results from 17 FFS Countries
Volume 2 - Article 1
Talking about AIDS: The influence of communication networks on individual risk perceptions of HIV/AIDS infection and favored protective behaviors in South Nyanza District, Kenya
Special Collection 1 - Article 13
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Transitions to adulthood in men and women in rural Malawi in the 21st century using sequence analysis: Some evidence of delay
Volume 51 - Article 14
| Keywords:
Africa,
Health and Demographic Surveillance System,
longitudinal analysis,
Malawi,
sequence analysis,
transition to adulthood
A probabilistic model for analyzing summary birth history data
Volume 47 - Article 11
| Keywords:
Bayesian hierarchical model,
Brass method,
Malawi,
spatial smoothing,
temporal smoothing
Women’s health decline following (some) unintended births: A prospective study
Volume 45 - Article 17
| Keywords:
fertility,
Malawi,
panel studies,
unintended fertility,
women's health
Marital dissolutions and changes in mental health: Evidence from rural Malawi
Volume 44 - Article 41
| Keywords:
divorce,
Malawi,
marriage,
mental health,
widowhood
Knowledge, risk perceptions, and behaviors related to the COVID-19 pandemic in Malawi
Volume 44 - Article 20
| Keywords:
adult health,
behavioral change,
COVID-19,
Malawi,
risk perception,
rural/urban differentials,
survey data
Cited References: 74
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar