Continuities in Providing for Old Age: Cross‐national and Cross‐cultural Comparisons
Donald F. Bellamy
Review of Policy Research, 1993, vol. 12, issue 1‐2, 159-181
Abstract:
Drawing on a purposive sample of 25 interviews supplemented by secondary source material, this comparative study explores the options available to elderly immigrants in two quite similar countries to achieve social security in their old age. The focus is the culturally determined perspectives and practices of aging Italian‐born and Indian‐born immigrants in the context of public and private sector social welfare policies and provisions in Australia and Canada. Government transfers, occupational superannuation, tax‐deductible personal savings, housing, and formal and informal supports are discussed. What is important to the sense of social security of the older people and how well‐off or disadvantaged they seem to be are among the questions raised. The design affords an opportunity to test the complex combination of cross‐national and cross‐cultural comparison. In the certainty that the income deficiencies of today's elderly immigrants cannot be remedied easily or quickly enough to benefit those affected, intervention strategies can be aimed at expanding ethno‐specific community supports and quality residential care; such a direction is supported by assessment of service availability in relation to estimates of aging among particular foreign‐born immigrant groups. Suggestions are made for future research at the levels of theory and application.
Date: 1993
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