Abstract
This study examines how family structure (i.e., single-person, single-parent, married, and two-generation households, and households containing three or more generations) influences households’ participation in secular giving. This study also aims to understand households’ participation in secular giving in further detail by identifying and comparing giving participation patterns by family structure. This study used data from the Korea Institute of Public Finance’s 9th to 11th Financial Panel Surveys and analyzed by using a pooled logistic regression and a false discovery rate (FDR) procedure of Benjamini-Hochberg. The results demonstrated significant differences in giving participation according to family structure. In particular, two-generation, single-parent, married, and single-person households were less likely to participate in secular giving than households containing three or more generations. According to the comparison by family structure, household income per capita was a consistently significant predictor over diverse family structures. Also, this study presents specific patterns of household participation in secular giving by family structure. This study newly examines how secular giving participation patterns differ by different family structures and discusses new tasks and social agendas based on empirical results.
Published Version
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