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Recent research has suggested that financial transfers from parents to their adult children in family are less likely to take place but more intense—i. e. for larger amounts—in the Southern countries than in the Nordic ones, with the Continental European countries falling-between the two. What remains to be examined is the variation among regimes in the social regulating these transfers. Using data from the first wave of the Survey of Health, Ageing Retirement in Europe (SHARE), this article shows that financial transfers have different aims and across the regimes. In Southern Europe, parents support their children mainly through-residence, and little economic support passes the walls of the house. In the Nordic countries, in, parent–child co-residence is non-normative. Children leave their parents’ home early and then direct and explicit help from them. The Continental countries fall in-between.
Albertini et al. (Fri,) studied this question.