A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Kinship and socio-economic status: Social gradients in frequencies of kin across the life course in Sweden
Authors: Andersson Linus, Kolk Martin
Publication year: 2023
Journal: Population Studies
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2023.2266403
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2023.2266403
The influence of kin on various outcomes is heavily debated. However, kinship size itself conditions the probability of potential effects. Socio-economic gradients in the prevalence, variance, and types of kin are, therefore, a vital aspect of the functions of kin. Unfortunately, these parameters are largely unknown. We used Swedish register data to enumerate consanguine and in-law kin across the life course of the 1975 birth cohort. We calculated differences in kinship size between this cohort’s income quartiles and educational groups. We decomposed how specific kin relations, generations, and demographic behaviours contributed to these differences. Among low socio-economic status (SES) groups, higher fertility in earlier generations resulted in more kin compared with high-SES groups. Low-SES groups had more horizontal consanguine kin, while high-SES groups had more in-laws. Lower fertility and higher union instability among low-SES men substantially narrowed SES differences in kinship size. Kinship size varied substantially within SES groups.
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