Bequest Division: The Roles of Parental Motives and Children’s Gender Composition

Javier Olivera, Warn Lekfuangfu, Philippe Van Kerm

Research output: Working paper

Abstract

Drawing on two data sources from across Europe, we show that both bequest motives of parents and children’s gender composition shape unequal divisions of bequests. First, the Survey on Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe reveals that observed bequests are divided unequally when children differ in sex, caregiving, or income, with bequest motives strongest among mixed-sex children. Second, in a vignette experiment featuring alternative bequest motive scenarios and randomised gender compositions for two fictitious children, hypothetical bequests are most unequally divided under the exchange motive while children’s gender composition matters more under the altruistic motive. Fictitious parents favour daughters regardless of deservingness, granting the highest bequest share to a deserving daughter with a brother. In return, these patterns reinforce traditional gender norms.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationBönn
PublisherIZA – Institute of Labor Economics
Number of pages57
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025

Publication series

NameIZA Discussion paper Series
PublisherIZA Institute of Labor Economics
No.17833
ISSN (Electronic)2365-9793

Keywords

  • altruism
  • deservingness
  • vignette experiment
  • gender
  • intergenerational transfers
  • Bequests
  • exchange
  • Europe
  • HFCS
  • SHARE

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