Abstract
The high level of coresidence of parents with married children in China, as in much of East Asia, is generally understood as a manifestation of the persistence of traditional family values in this region. In urban China the opposite is true: coresidence is maintained in spite of a diversity of both traditional and nontraditional norms. Survey data gathered among parents aged 60 and older in nine Chinese cities are used to analyze people's preferences and actual living situation: Do they live (or prefer to live) with a married child? If so, do they live (or prefer to live) with a married son? A large share of parents do not have the living arrangement that they consider best, as they adapt their behavior to other circumstances. Even their preferences depend on their situation, including their housing space, needs for assistance, family size, and perceived family relations. We conclude that the Chinese family is “modern,” in the sense that parents' family decisions represent strategic choices about how to live, not predetermined by a fixed cultural model.
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