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A Study on the Analysis of Metropolitan Government Ordinances on the Support of Multi-Child Households

Title
A Study on the Analysis of Metropolitan Government Ordinances on the Support of Multi-Child Households
Alternative Author(s)

Bae, Hyewon ; Kim, Taeeun

Keyword
Multi-Child ; Multi-Child Households ; Support of Multi-Child Households ; Metropolitan Government Ordinance ; Ordinance Analysis
Publication Year
2023-09-30
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.43 No.3, pp.92-113
Abstract
The current family demographic landscape is witnessing a rapid decline in households with three or more children, commonly referred to as multi-child households. Ironically, government policies aimed at supporting multi-child households have been slow to adapt, primarily targeting families with three or more children. This inertia has raised pertinent concerns about the low level of policy sensitivity to evolving household structures. As a corrective measure, the government has recently expanded the extent of its support to include households with two children, demonstrating a heightened policy awareness. However, amidst this policy shift, two challenges emerge: the lack of an agreed-upon definition of multi-child households and the uncertain legal foundation for such policies.

Through a rigorous analysis of metropolitan ordinances pertaining to assistance for multi-child families, this study identifies potential strategies for legal fortification and policy enhancement. Key findings from this exploration reveal that current ordinance formulations predominantly echo the perspectives of the state, society, and caregivers, sidelining the well-being of the children themselves. There is a palpable inconsistency across local governments in defining multi-child households, highlighting the need for a standardized definition factoring in the number of children, their ages, and the overall household composition. This standardization would require deliberations on inclusion criteria concerning fetuses, foster homes, and grandparent-headed households. A third key finding is that fiscal responsibility is essential, with a call for policies to transcend their discretionary nature and become mandatory to ensure sustainable support. This study also underscores the importance of offering benefits that span the entire lifecycle, emphasizing households over individual children. Conclusively, while universal support emerges as the ultimate goal for qualifying multi-child households, the study advocates for a tiered support approach, prioritizing the enhancement of children's quality of life based on household size.
ISSN
1226-072X
DOI
10.15709/hswr.2023.43.3.92
KIHASA Research
Subject Classification
Population and family > Responses to fertility decline
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