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Family Functioning: Family support AVERAGE TIME PER DAY SPENT INTERACTING WITH RELATIVES, 1992 Source: Time Use Survey
Parents providing child care Parents give significant amounts of support to their children, especially when the children are young. The nature of this support is very broad and includes activities such as washing, cooking, cleaning and providing an income. These forms of support are not included in child care activities. On average, 98% of mothers in couples with children under 2 years provided child care on any given day, compared to 77% of their husbands. By the time the youngest child was aged 10-14, 57% of mothers provided child care on a given day compared to 34% of fathers. This reflects the division of domestic responsibilities between mothers and fathers (see Australian Social Trends 1994, Unpaid household work). Mothers whose youngest child was under 2 years old spent an average of 14 hours a day undertaking child care activities. Fathers spent four and a half hours. Some of these families also had children aged over 2 and the figures represent the total amount of time parents spent providing child care to all their children, not just the youngest. The amount of time spent on child care declined as the age of the youngest children increased, and the nature of the child care changed. Mothers with children under 2 years spent 4 hours (29% of their total child care time) giving physical care to their children, while mothers with children aged 5-9 spent 1 hour (12% of their caring time) on physical care. The amount of time parents spent playing with, reading to or talking to their children also decreased as the children got older. However, playing with, reading or talking to their children became a greater proportion of the total time parents spent on child care. It increased from 17% of time spent on child care by parents with children under 2 years old to 38% for parents whose youngest child was aged 10-14. Mothers of children under 2 years spent 6 hours more on child care than mothers of children aged 5-9. However for fathers the difference was only 45 minutes. The amount of time fathers spent in physical care of their children fell rapidly as the child got older. However the time fathers spent on most other forms of child care did not change significantly until the youngest child was aged 10-14. Mothers of children under 15 spent 55% of all their child care time passively minding their children and fathers spent 59%. Passive minding of children represents a high proportion of all child care because it is often done at the same time as other activities, such as watching TV, cleaning, ironing or cooking. 7% of mothers and 4% of fathers of children aged under 2 years spent some time nursing a sick or disabled child on a given day. On these days mothers spent an average of 72 minutes nursing a sick child, while fathers averaged 58 minutes. The total time spent on child care on these days would be significantly higher if all child care activities were included. AVERAGE TIME(a) PER DAY SPENT ON CHILD CARE ACTIVITIES(b) BY PARENTS IN COUPLE FAMILIES, 1992
(a) In hours and minutes. (b) Includes child care for all children, not just the youngest, regardless of whether other activities were also undertaken at the same time. Source: Time Use Survey Parents supporting older children who live at home Parents who have children living with them can provide many forms of support, including the provision of free rent or board. Even children who pay rent or board to their parents tend to pay well below market prices. These forms of support do not necessarily indicate a burden on the parents, but they do indicate, in most cases, the receipt of support by the children. In 1991, 40% of 20-24 year olds lived with their parents compared to 34% in 1981. This indicates that children were receiving these and other forms of support from their parents for longer than they had a decade earlier. However, as young adults got older, they were less likely to live with their parents. In 1991, 13% of 25-29 year olds and 5% of 30-34 year olds lived with their parents (see Australian Social Trends 1994, Living with parents). Among children who lived with their parents, the older they were the less likely they were to pay no rent or board. In 1992, 45% of 20-24 year olds living at home paid no rent or board compared to 33% of 25-34 year olds. 86% of 20-24 year old full-time students living with their parents paid no rent or board, reflecting their greater financial dependence on their parents. Among 20-24 year olds living with their parents, women were more likely to live rent-free than men. The reverse was true of 25-34 year olds. About 30% of children who lived with their parents and had incomes over $25,000 a year paid no rent or board. PROPORTION OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH PARENTS WHO PAID NO RENT OR BOARD, 1992
Source: Survey of Families in Australia Parents supporting children who have left home In 1992, 679,000 people who were no longer living with their parents had received some form of income support from their parents in the previous 12 months. The most common types of income support were a gift of cash (353,000), a household item (214,000), or food or clothing (134,000). Most of these recipients were aged in their 20s or early 30s. 45% of income support from parents to children was identified as coming from both parents acting together. In the remaining cases, the child identified only one parent as the provider but this does not necessarily mean that the other parent had no involvement in the decision. It does indicate the child's perceptions of the source of the support. Parents were most likely to be identified together as providers of regular financial assistance When one parent was identified as the sole provider of income support, it was more likely to be the mother, especially in providing more than $200 as a cash gift, a household item, or food or clothing. Children were more likely to identify their father than their mother as providers of motor vehicles or regular financial assistance. 446,000 people who were no longer living with their parents received some help with home or land purchasing from their parents in the ten years to 1992. The most common forms of help were a loan of money (286,000), or a gift of money (147,000). About 40% of help with home or land purchasing to children came from both parents acting together. However, children who received a gift of land, home or home improvements identified their father as the sole provider in 48% of cases. Mothers and fathers were about equally likely to be identified as providers of loans of money for housing. SUPPORT RECEIVED BY PEOPLE NOT LIVING WITH THEIR PARENTS, 1992
(a) People who received income support from their parents in the previous 12 months. (b) People who received help with home or land purchasing from their parents in the previous ten years. Source: Survey of Families in Australia Support for older people In 1992, 24% (434,000) of people aged 65 or more had received personal care or home help in the previous six months. About half of these people (211,000) received their main assistance from relatives while most of the rest received their main assistance from government or voluntary organisations. Children were the main providers of help for 49% of aged people who received care from their relatives. Daughters provided significantly more assistance than sons and also provided a wider range of assistance. Daughters provided more meals, housework, personal care and general nursing than sons. Sons provided more home repairs and maintenance than daughters. This is consistent with the patterns observed in unpaid household work generally. People aged 75 and over are more likely to receive care from their children than people aged 65-74. This is because they are more likely to need care, and they are less likely to have a spouse to care for them. 38% of people aged 65-74 who received domestic assistance from relatives received it from their children compared to 59% of people aged 75 and over. 37,000 people aged 65-74 received their main source of domestic assistance from their children. The numbers of sons (16,000) and daughters (17,000) providing this assistance were similar. However, there were more than twice as many people aged 75 and over who received their main source of domestic assistance from their daughters (42,000) as from their sons (20,000). This is because older people need more nursing and personal care which daughters usually provide. Spouses tend to provide a wider range of support than other relatives. 72,000 people identified their spouse as the main provider of at least one form of domestic assistance. On average, these spouses were identified as the main provider of 3 of the 5 types of domestic assistance. PEOPLE AGED 65 YEARS OR MORE WHO RECEIVED MAIN DOMESTIC ASSISTANCE FROM RELATIVES, 1992
(a) Includes cases where the main source of domestic assistance is provided by more than one child. (b) Since people may receive more than one type of domestic assistance, components may not add, or average, to totals. Source: Survey of Families in Australia Grandparents as child carers In 1992 there were 1.8 million families with children under 12 years. In 35% of these, grandparents were the main providers of informal child care. Grandparents were more likely to be providers of informal care for younger children than for older children. For 46% of families with the youngest child aged under 2 years grandparents provided the main source of informal care compared to 26% of families with children aged 5-11. Reasons for this difference include a lesser need for child care once a child starts school and the presence of older siblings who can act as baby sitters. Maternal grandparents were more likely than paternal grandparents to be the main providers of informal child care, 27% compared to 9%. Grandmothers were also more likely than grandfathers, or both grandparents, to be the main provider of child care. MAIN PROVIDERS(a) OF INFORMAL CHILD CARE, 1992
(a) The main provider of child care is the individual, other than a resident parent, who provides the most child care for the family, not necessarily to the youngest child. Source: Survey of Families in Australia
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