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129 Monthly Lab. Rev. 3 (2006)
The Sandwich Generation: Women Caring for Parents and Children

handle is hein.journals/month129 and id is 1075 raw text is: The 'sandwich generation': women
caring for parents and children
Data from the National Longitudinal Survey are used to estimate
the number and characteristics of women 45 to 56 years old
who care for both their children and their parents;
these women transfer a significant amount of money
to their children and time to their parents

Charles R. Pierret
Charles R. Pierret is
Director of
Longitudinal
Surveys, Office of
Employment
and Unemployment
Statistics,
Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
The views expressed in
this article
are those of the
author and do not
necessarily reflect the
position of
the Bureau of Labor
Statistics or
Department of Labor.
E-mail:
Plerret.Charles@bls.gov

7Fi he term sandwich generation has become
increasingly common in the United States
over the last two decades. In a collective
sense, the term has been used to describe the
middle-aged generation who have elderly parents
and dependent children.1 In the individual sense,
the term describes people who are squeezed
between the simultaneous demands of caring for
their aging parents and supporting their dependent
children. This article uses the term in the individual
sense and estimates how many women 45 to 56
years old are part of the sandwich generation based
on data from the National Longitudinal Survey of
Young Women (NLsYw). It examines demographic
characteristics of these women and the type and
amount of support they give to their children
and parents.
The size of the sandwich generation depends
on how one defines it. An AARP report found that
44 percent of 45- to 55-year-olds had both at least
one living parent and one child under age 21. Only
7 percent of45- to 55-year-olds, however, lived in a
household containing three generations; usually
oneself, one's parents or in-laws, and one's
children.2 Support, of course, can mean something
other than co-residence. Parents may provide
financial support to their nonresident children for
college expenses, the purchase of a home, or just
as gifts. They may also provide help with childcare
or household errands. Adult children can likewise
help their elderly parents with personal care or
errands, or with financial assistance, even if they
do not live together.

In a sense, the sandwich generation is not a new
phenomenon. Elderly or infirm parents historically
have been cared for by their children, often within
the child's home. The increased attention to the
sandwich generation in recent years probably has
its roots in many demographic trends.3 As life
expectancy increases, more middle-aged people
tend to have parents who are still alive. Addi-
tionally, these parents probably have fewer
children, so there might be fewer siblings with
whom to share the burden. Adult children are more
likely to live further from their parents, making
decisions about caregiving more complicated and
disruptive. Women are having children at later ages,
so their parents are older, but their children are still
young. Support for children might last longer than
the support received by their parents' generation,
often reaching into the early and even mid-20s
as they attend college and establish their own
households. Women are more likely to work out-
side the home, making it increasingly difficult to
provide additional caregiving services. Interest
in these problems is undoubtedly due to the fact
that they are being experienced by the baby-
boom generation, a group that, by its sheer size,
garners a large amount of media attention.
This article determines what proportion of
middle-aged American women can be classified
as part of the sandwich generation. Using data
from the NLSYW and its 1997 and 1999 sections
on intrafamily transfers (that is, money or hours
provided to another family member), this article
provides estimates based on various definitions
Monthly Labor Review    September 2006    3

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