Extended gender inequality? Intergenerational coresidence and division of household labor

Soc Sci Res. 2021 Jan:93:102497. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2020.102497. Epub 2020 Nov 7.

Abstract

This study investigates the effect of coresidence with the husband's or the wife's parents on division of household labor between the couple in China. We further examine how life course, education, hukou, and the gender composition of coresiding parents moderate the relationship between intergenerational coresidence and division of household labor. Previous research on housework division has looked at nuclear families. Little is known about the effect of intergenerational coresidence on housework division. Despite rapid modernization, intergenerational coresidence remains prevalent in China as families try to adapt to the changing social and economic conditions. While patrilocal coresidence dominates in both rural and urban China, matrilocal coresidence is increasingly common in urban China. Based on panel data from the 2010, 2014, 2016, and 2018 waves of the China Family Panel Studies, fixed effects models are used to account for both observed and unobserved individual-specific confounders. Both patrilocal and matrilocal coresidence seem to widen the within-couple gender gap in housework time among urban hukou holders. Among rural hukou holders, though patrilocal coresidence is associated with reduced housework time for the wife and the couple as a whole, neither patrilocal nor matrilocal coresidence significantly influences how much time the husband spent on housework. Coresidence with the husband's or the wife's parents may exacerbate gender inequality in housework division.

Keywords: Gender inequality; Housework division; Intergenerational coresidence; Matrilocal coresidence; Patrilocal coresidence; Rural and urban China.

MeSH terms

  • Educational Status
  • Family Characteristics*
  • Household Work
  • Humans
  • Rural Population*
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Spouses