Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T22:56:35.621Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The erosion of filial piety by modernisation in Chinese cities

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2009

CHAU-KIU CHEUNG*
Affiliation:
Applied Social Studies, City University of Hong Kong, China.
ALEX YUI-HUEN KWAN
Affiliation:
Applied Social Studies, City University of Hong Kong, China.
*
Address for correspondence: Chau-Kiu Cheung, Department of Applied Social Studies, City University of Hong Kong, Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, China. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Whether filial piety or financial support to older parents is eroded or maintained through societal modernisation is an unresolved issue in China and a matter of widespread concern. Whereas structural-functionalist theories predict erosion, alternative views suggest that modernisation reduces filial piety only minimally or conditionally. One possible condition that resists the modernisation effect is education. The impacts of modernisation and its interaction with Chinese education are therefore the focus of this study. Using various sources, the paper reports analyses of the relationships between the levels of modernisation in six Chinese cities, measured by average gross domestic product per capita, the average wage and the percentage of the workforce that are employed in the service sector, and variations in expressions of filial piety and cash payments to parents. Representative samples of the cities' adult residents were used. It was found that filial piety and cash payments were lower when the citizen was in a city with higher or more advanced modernisation, and that the reduction in affirmations of filial piety associated with higher modernisation was less among citizens with higher education. It is concluded that educational policy and practice can be a means to sustain filial piety in the face of modernisation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2009 Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aboderin, I. 2004 a. Decline in material family support for older people in urban Ghana, Africa: understanding processes and causes of change. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 59B, 3, S128–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aboderin, I. 2004 b. Modernisation and ageing theory revisited: current explanations of recent developing world and historical western shifts in material family support for older people. Ageing & Society, 24, 1, 2950.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aguilero, M. B. 2002. The impact of social capital on labor force participation: evidence from the 2000 Social Capital Benchmark Survey. Social Science Quarterly, 83, 3, 853–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, A. E. 1999. Social support and life satisfaction among the never married. Research on Aging, 21, 1, 4672.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bawin-Legros, B. 2001. Families in Europe: a private and political stake, intimacy and solidarity. Current Sociology, 49, 5, 4965.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beck, U. and Beck-Gernsheim, E. 2002. Individualization: Institutionalized Individualism and its Social and Political Consequences. Sage, London.Google Scholar
Bengtson, V. L., Harootyan, R. A., Kronebusch, K., Lawton, L., Schlesinger, M., Silverstein, M. and Vorek, R. E. 1994. Intergenerational Linkages: Hidden Connections in American Society. Springer Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Bengtson, V. L., Giarrusso, R., Marby, J. B. and Silverstein, M. 2002. Solidarity, conflict, and ambivalence: complementary or competing perspectives on intergenerational relationships? Journal of Marriage and the Family, 64, 3, 568–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borgatta, E. F. and Bohrnstedt, G. W. 1981. Level of measurement once over again. In Borgatta, E. F. and Bohrnstedt, G. W. (eds) Social Measurement: Current Issues. Sage, Beverly Hills, California, 2337.Google Scholar
Brand, P. 1999. The environment and postmodern spatial consciousness: a sociology of urban environmental agendas. Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 42, 5, 631–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broaded, C. M., Cao, Z. and Inkeles, A. 1994. Women, men, and the construction of individual modernity scales in China. Cross-Cultural Research, 28, 3, 251–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chattopadhyay, A. and Marsh, R. 1999. Changes in living arrangement and familial support for the elderly in Taiwan: 1963-1991. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 30, 3, 523–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chen, S. 1996. Social Policy of the Economic State and Community Care in Chinese Culture: Aging, Family, Urban Change, and the Socialist Welfare Pluralism. Avebury, Aldershot, Hampshire, UK.Google Scholar
Chen, X. 2003. China's City Statistics Annals: 2002. China Statistics, Beijing.Google Scholar
Cheng, S.-T. and Chan, A. C. M. 2006. Filial piety and psychological well-being in well older Chinese. Journal of Gerontology: Psychological Sciences, 61B, 5, P262–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheung, C.-K., Lee, J.-J. and Chan, C.-M. 1994. Explicating filial piety in relation to family cohesion. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 22, 3, 565–80.Google Scholar
Chiu, W. C. K., Chan, A. W., Snape, E. and Redman, T. 2001. Age stereotypes and discriminatory attitudes towards older workers: an East-West comparison. Human Relations, 54, 5, 629–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cicirelli, V. G. 1993. Attachment and obligation as daughters' motives for caregiving behavior and subsequent effect on subjective burden. Psychology and Aging, 8, 2, 144–55.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Coleman, J. S. 1986. Social theory, social research, and a theory of action. American Journal of Sociology, 91, 1309–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coleman, M. and Ganong, L. 1997. Beliefs about women's intergenerational family obligations to provide support before and after divorce and remarriage. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 59, 1, 165–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Croll, E. J. 2006. The intergenerational contract in the changing Asian family. Oxford Development Studies, 34, 4, 473–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtis, M. P., Sales, A. E. B., Sullivan, J. J., Gary, S. L. and Hedrick, S. L. 2005. Satisfaction with care among community residential care residents. Journal of Aging and Health, 17, 1, 327.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Ruijter, E. 2004. Trends in the outsourcing of domestic work and childcare in The Netherlands: compositional or behavioral change? Acta Sociologica, 47, 3, 219–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deutsch, F. M. 2004. How parents influence the life plans of graduating Chinese university students. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 35, 3, 393424.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dioale, W. and Seda, A. 2001. Modernization as changes in cultural complexity: new cross-cultural measurements. Cross-Cultural Research, 35, 2, 129–53.Google Scholar
Esping-Andersen, G., Gallie, D., Aemerijck, A. and Myles, J. 2002. Why We Need a New Welfare State. Oxford University Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Finley, N. J. 1989. Theories of family labor as applied to gender differences in caregiving for elderly parents. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 51, 1, 7986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fu, J. H.-Y. and Chiu, C.-Y. 2007. Local cultural responses to globalization: exemplary persons and their attendant values. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 38, 5, 636–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ganong, L., Coleman, M., McDaniel, A. K. and Killian, T. 1998. Attitudes regarding obligations to assist an older parent or step-parent following later-life remarriage. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 60, 3, 595610.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilliland, N. and Havir, L. 1990. Public opinion and long-term care policy. In Biegel, D. E. and Blum, A. (eds) Aging and Caregiving: Theory, Research and Policy. Sage, Newbury Park, California, 242–53.Google Scholar
Green, A., Preston, J. and Sabutes, R. 2003. Education, equity and social cohesion: a distributional approach. Compare, 33, 4, 453–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gummesson, E. 1991. Service quality: a holistic view. In Brown, S. W., Gummesson, E., Edvardsson, B. and Gustavsson, B. (eds) Service Quality: Multidisciplinary and Multinational Perspectives. Lexington, New York, 322.Google Scholar
Gupta, R. and Pillai, V. K. 2002. Elder care giving in South Asian families: implications for social services. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 33, 4, 565–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutmann, D. 1987. Reclaimed Powers: Toward a New Psychology of Men and Women in Later Life. Basic, New York.Google Scholar
Hermalin, A. I. and Shih, S. R. 2003. Support received by the elderly in Baoding: the view from two generations. In Whyte, M. K. (ed.) China's Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations. Center for China Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 121–41.Google Scholar
Ho, D. Y. F. 1996. Filial piety and its psychological consequences. In Bond, M. H. (ed.) Handbook of Chinese Psychology. Oxford University Press, Hong Kong, 155–64.Google Scholar
Holroyd, E. and Mackenzie, A. E. 1997. Beijing families: the behavior and sentiment of caregiving. Journal of Family Nursing, 3, 4, 348–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hou, W., Zhang, Y. and Huang, M. 2003. Conflict and Integration. Chinese People, Beijing.Google Scholar
Hu, L-T. and Bentler, P. M. 1999. Cut-off criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis: conventional criteria versus new alternatives. Structural Equation Modeling, 6, 1, 155.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ikkink, K. K., Tilburg, T. V. and Knipscheer, K. C. P. M. 1999. Perceived instrumental support exchanges in relationship between elderly parents and their adult children: normative and structural explanations. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 61, 831–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inglehart, R. and Welzel, C. 2005. Modernization, Cultural Change, and Democracy: The Human Development Sequence. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Ishii-Kuntz, M. 1997. Intergenerational relationships among Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Americans. Family Relations, 46, 1, 2332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kampen, J. and Swyngendouw, M. 2000. The ordinal controversy revisited. Quality and Quantity, 34, 81102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kanfer, R., Wanberg, C. R. and Kantrowitz, T. M. 2001. Job search and employment: a personality-motivational analysis and meta-analytic review. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86, 5, 837–55.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keith, P. M. 2003. Interests and skills of volunteers in an ombudsman program: opportunities for participation. International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 57, 1, 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kessler, R. C., Michelson, K. D. and Williams, D. R. 1999. The prevalence, distribution, and mental health correlates of perceived discrimination in the United States. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 40, 3, 208–30.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kohn, M. L. 1989. Social structure and personality: a quintessentially sociological approach to social psychology. Social Forces, 68, 1, 2633.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laditka, J. N. and Laditka, S. B. 2001. Adult children helping older parents: variations in likelihood and hours by gender race and family role. Research on Aging, 23, 4, 429–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lam, R. C. 2006. Contradictions between traditional Chinese values and the actual performance: a study of the caregiving roles of the modern sandwich generation in Hong Kong. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 37, 2, 299312.Google Scholar
Lawrence, R. H., Bennett, J. M. and Markides, K. S. 1992. Perceived intergenerational solidarity and psychological distress among older Mexican Americans. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 47, 2, S5565.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lee, G. R., Netzer, J. K. and Coward, R. T. 1994. Filial responsibility expectations and patterns of intergenerational assistance. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 56, 3, 559–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levande, D. I., Hernick, J. M. and Sung, K.-T. 2000. Eldercare in the United States and South Korea: balancing family and community support. Journal of Family Issues, 21, 5, 632–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Y. 2002. China's City Annals. China's City Annals, Beijing.Google Scholar
Lin, A.-H. 1992. Study of Filial Piety in Confucian Thought. Wen Jin, Taipei, Taiwan.Google Scholar
Lin, I.-F., Goldman, N., Weinstein, M., Lin, Y.-H., Gorrindo, T. and Seeman, T. 2003. Gender differences in adult children's support of their parents in Taiwan. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 65, 2, 184200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menchik, P. L. and Weisbrod, B. A. 1986. Volunteer labor supply. Journal of Public Economics, 32, 2, 159–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, B. A., Vister, A. V. and Gee, E. M. 2002. There's no place like home: an analysis of young adults' mature coresidency in Canada. International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 54, 1, 5784.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Muthen, L. K. and Muthen, B. O. 2006. Mplus User's Guide. Muthen and Muthen, Los Angeles, California.Google Scholar
Ng, S. H., Loong, C. S. F., Liu, J. H. and Weatherall, A. 2000. Will the young support the old? An individual- and family-level study of filial obligation in two New Zealand cultures. Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 3, 2, 103–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ng, S. H. 2002. Will families support their elders? Answers from across cultures. In Nelson, T. D. (ed.) Stereotyping and Prejudice against Older Persons. MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 295310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palmore, E. B. 1990. Ageism: Negative and Positive. Springer Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Roberts, R. E. L. and Bengtson, V. L. 1990. Is intergenerational solidarity a unidimensional construct? A second test of a formal model. Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 45, 1, S1220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rossi, A. S. and Rossi, P. H. 1991. Normative obligations and parent-child help exchange across the life course. In Pillemer, K. and McCartney, K. (eds) Parent-Child Relations Throughout Life. Lawrence Erlbaum, Hillsdale, New Jersey, 201–23.Google Scholar
SAS Inc. 1995. Logistic Regression Examples Using the SAS System. SAS Inc., Cary, North Carolina.Google Scholar
Savelsberg, J. J. 2002. Dialectics of norms in modernization. Sociological Quarterly, 43, 2, 277305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schulz, R. 1990. Theoretical perspectives on caregiving, concepts, variables, and methods. In Biegel, D. E. and Blum, A. (eds) Aging and Caregiving: Theory, Research, and Policy. Sage, Newbury Park, California, 2752.Google Scholar
Seike, A. and Shimada, H. 1994. Social security benefits and the labor supply of the elderly in Japan. In Noguchi, Y. and Wise, D. A. (eds) Aging in the United States and Japan: Economic Trends. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois, 4361.Google Scholar
Sheng, X. and Settles, B. H. 2006. Intergenerational relationships and elderly care in China: a global perspective. Current Sociology, 54, 2, 293313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shi, T. 1996. Survey research in China. Research in Micropolitics, 5, 213–50.Google Scholar
Silverstein, M. and Bengtson, V. L. 1997. Intergenerational solidarity and the structure of adult-child parent relationships in American families. American Journal of Sociology, 103, 2, 429–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silverstein, M., Bengtson, V. L. and Litwak, E. 2003. Theoretical approaches to problems of families, aging, and social support in the context of modernization. In Biggs, S., Lowenstein, A. and Hendricks, J. (eds) The Need for Theory: Critical Approaches to Social Gerontology. Baywood, Amityville, New York, 181–99.Google Scholar
Sotirovic, M. 2000. Effects of media use on audience framing and support for welfare. Mass Communication and Society, 3, 2–3, 269–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spitze, G. and Logan, J. 1990. Sons, daughters, and intergenerational social support. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 52, 2, 420–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strom, R., Strom, S., Shen, Y.-L., Li, S.-J. and Sun, H.-L. 1996. Grandparents in Taiwan: a three-generational study. International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 42, 1, 119.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Swenson, D. 2004. A Neo-functionalist Synthesis of Theories in Family Sociology. Edwin Mellin, Lesiston, New York.Google Scholar
Thomas, E. 1990. Filial piety, social change and Singapore youth. Journal of Moral Education, 19, 3, 192204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treas, J. and Chena, J. 2000. Living arrangements, income pooling, and the life course in urban Chinese families. Research on Aging, 22, 3, 238–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Velleman, P. and Wilkinson, L. 1993. Nominal, ordinal, interval, and ratio typologies are misleading. American Statistician, 47, 1, 6572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vernon, A. and Qureshi, H. 2000. Community care and independence: self-sufficiency or empowerment. Critical Social Policy, 20, 2, 255–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, D. 2004. Ritualistic coresidence and the weakening of filial practice in rural China. In Ikels, C. (ed.) Filial Piety: Practice and Discourses in Contemporary East Asia. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 1633.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whyte, M. K. and Qin, L. 2003. Support for aging parents form daughters versus sons. In Whyte, M. K. (ed.) China's Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations. Center for China Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 167–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whyte, M. K. 2003. The persistence of family obligations in Baoding. In Whyte, M. K. (ed.) China's Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations. Center for China Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 85118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whyte, M. K. 2004. Filial obligations in Chinese families: paradoxes of modernization. In Ikels, C. (ed.) Filial Piety: Practice and Discourses in Contemporary East Asia. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, 106–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, A. and Nussbaum, J. F. 2001. Intergenerational Communication Across the Life Span. Erlbaum, Mahwah, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Williams, A., Ota, H., Giles, H., Pierson, R. D., Gallois, C., Ng, S.-H., Lim, T.-S., Ryan, E. B., Somera, L., Maher, J., Cai, D. and Harwood, J. 1997. Young people's beliefs about intergenerational communication: an initial cross-cultural comparison. Communication Research, 24, 4, 370–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, J. 2000. Volunteering. Annual Review of Sociology, 26, 215–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wu, Z. and MacNeill, L. 2002. Education, work, and childbearing after age 30. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 33, 2, 191213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xiao, H. 2000. Structure of child-rearing values in urban China. Sociological Perspectives, 43, 3, 457–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Xu, X. and Ji, J. 1999. Supports for the aged in China: a rural-urban comparison. Journal of Asian and African Studies, 34, 3, 257–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yan, S., Chen, J. and Yang, S. 2003. Living arrangements and old-age support. In Whyte, M. K. (ed.) China's Revolutions and Intergenerational Relations. Center for China Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 143–66.Google Scholar
Yang, H. and Chandler, D. 1992. Intergenerational relations: grievances of the elderly in rural China. Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 23, 3, 431–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yang, Y. and Zhang, B. 2001. Social attitudes of urban residents. In Jiang, L., Lu, X. and Dan, T. (eds) Analysis and Forecast of China's Social Situation. China Social Science, Beijing, China, 2743.Google Scholar
Yao, Y. 2001. Study on Family Support for Elderly in China. China Population, Beijing, China.Google Scholar
Zhan, H. J. 2004 a. Willingness and expectations: intergenerational differences in attitudes toward filial responsibility in China. Marriage and Family Review, 34, 1–2, 175200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhan, H. J. 2004 b. Socialization or social structure: investigating predictors of attitudes toward filial responsibility among Chinese urban youth from one- and multiple-child families. International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 59, 2, 105–24.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yang, K.-S. 1996. The psychological transformation of the Chinese people as a result of societal modernization. In Bond, M. H. (ed.) The Handbook of Chinese Psychology. Oxford University Press, Hong Kong, 477–98.Google Scholar