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The Social Engagement of People Living Alone at Mid-life in Korea: A Comparison with Those of Living Together

Title
The Social Engagement of People Living Alone at Mid-life in Korea: A Comparison with Those of Living Together
Author(s)

이병호

Keyword
1인 가구 ; 중장년 ; 사회참여 ; 결혼지위 ; 주관적 웰빙 ; One-person Household ; Mid-life ; Social Engagement ; Marital Status ; Subjective Well-being
Publication Year
2014-09-30
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.34 No.3, pp.348-373
Abstract
This paper explores the quality of life of people ‘living alone’ at mid-life in Korea. There can be two opposing arguments on this population comprising predominantly single people. It is possible to predict that their levels of subjective well-being and social engagement are relatively lower, considering a positive effect of marriage on happiness and life satisfaction. By contrast, many recent studies have asserted that they are not only high in self-esteem and life satisfaction, but they also actively engage in social activities. Given that the utility of marriage has gradually declined, this perspective is seemingly valid. However, it entails several methodological shortcomings especially failing to compare with those who ‘living together.’ Hence this study, which tests the validity of these two hypotheses, aims to identify an empirical reality of living alone through analyzing the most recent 2010 Korean census individual-level microdata. It employs the negative binomial regression analysis on the sample of 151,494 individuals aged 30 to 49 including 13,548 cases who are living alone. It finds that the average number of membership in voluntary associations that participated at least once during the last year for people living alone is around 8 percent lower than for people living together, which is statistically significant controlling for other socio-demographic variables such as marital status, educational attainment, and economic activity status. This efficacy of being one-person household is very robust as it appears all characteristics of independent variables; for instance, divorced people who live together tend to engage more social activities than those who live alone. Thus, one-person household per se has a negative association with social engagement level. Meanwhile, this level also differs among people who live alone: those who have a spouse, are more educated, and spend longer time for income-related work are more likely to participate in social activities.
Table Of Contents
Ⅰ. 문제제기
Ⅱ. 이론적 배경
Ⅲ. 자료, 변수 및 연구방법
Ⅳ. 분석결과
Ⅴ. 요약 및 제언
참고문헌
ISSN
1226-072X
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