Authors
Randall Kuhn, Bethany Everett, Rachel Silvey
Publication date
2011/2/1
Journal
Demography
Volume
48
Issue
1
Pages
183-209
Publisher
Duke University Press
Description
Recent studies of migration and the left-behind have found that elders with migrant children actually experience better health outcomes than those with no migrant children, yet these studies raise many concerns about self-selection. Using three rounds of panel survey data from the Indonesian Family Life Survey, we employ the counterfactual framework developed by Rosenbaum and Rubin to examine the relationship between having a migrant child and the health of elders aged 50 and older, as measured by activities of daily living (ADL), self-rated health (SRH), and mortality. As in earlier studies, we find a positive association between old-age health and children’s migration, an effect that is partly explained by an individual’s propensity to have migrant children. Positive impacts of migration are much greater among elders with a high propensity to have migrant children than among those with low propensity …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202433765713181413142215136