Abstract
This paper analyzes the effect of longevity on parenting choices from a life course perspective. We develop an overlapping generations model to address a core tradeoff that young parents face when investing in their children’s human capital. They can choose a low-time-cost demanding strategy that risks straining intergenerational relations or a time-intensive pedagogical method that fosters familial bonds at the cost of reduced parental income. Aging parents value attention of their adult children, who uphold the eldercare norm while bringing the shared history of their relationship into the caregiving environment. The rising future need for eldercare heightens the value of pedagogical effort for building relational capital and reveals parental demandingness as counterproductive. Our analysis suggests that longer life expectancy reduces the prevalence of authoritarian parenting practices, while higher income promotes greater pedagogical effort. We characterize the steady states of parenting styles and human capital and then examine their dynamic responses to changes in longevity and eldercare time.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Review of Economics of the Household |
| Early online date | 3 Jan 2026 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 3 Jan 2026 |
Bibliographical note
We are indebted to the editor, three anonymous referees, and the participants of PET 2024 and ESWC 2025 for valuable comments and suggestions and thank Nancy Jiao for research assistance. All errors are our own.Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2026.
Funding
Yu Pang gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Macau University of Science and Technology Foundation (FRG-23-051-MSB) and the Education Fund of the Macau SAR Government (M23-0000451930). Pierre Pestieau gratefully acknowledges the financial support from the TSE-SCOR chair “Risk Markets and Value Creation”.
Keywords
- Human capital
- Longevity
- Old-age support
- Parenting