
PARC Working Paper Series
Document Type
Working Paper
Date of this Version
9-1998
Abstract
There has been increased attention in recent years to decision-making within the context of multi-member households in which individual members differ in their preferences. Two implications of various alternative specifications of the non-unitary household framework that highlight optimization by individuals have received particular attention and have important implications for the design and consequences of programs that seek to influence resource allocations via income transfers. The first is that the distribution of resources within the household may depend on who in the household receives income transfers. Recent changes in family welfare rules in England, which mandated a shift in the payments of family allowances to married couples from husbands to wives, is an example of a social policy attentive to the proposition that households engage in non-unitary decision-making (Lundberg, Pollak and Wales (1997)).
Keywords
bequests, household decision-making, wealth, parents, in laws, marriage, divorce, adult children, family, finances, income, inheritance
Included in
Demography, Population, and Ecology Commons, Family, Life Course, and Society Commons, Finance Commons
Date Posted: 30 January 2020
Comments
Behrman, Jere R. and Mark R. Rosenzweig. 1998. "In-law Resources and Distribution Within Marriage." PARC Working Paper Series, WPS 98-18.