Abstract

In recent years, considerable attention has been devoted to the value of unpaid work in the economy. One very important aspect of unpaid work is caregiving for chronically ill or disabled people and the question of whether or not family-and-friend caregiving eases the burden on the publicly funded system. Using data from the 1996 General Social Survey, this paper investigates the extent to which the presence of a spouse of a senior aged 55 and over with a long-term illness reduces the amount of publicly funded care received. The findings from the multivariate Tobit analysis show that the presence of the spouse does significantly reduce the amount of publicly funded care used. This result is not gender-specific. The total hours of caregiving by the spouse are valued, as well as the savings generated for the publicly funded system, and the policy issue of tax relief for spouses who are engaged in long-term caregiving is explored.

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