Repository logo
 

Penalty versus premium: social disposition differentiates life satisfaction among living-alone immigrant and native-born older adults — findings from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA)

Faculty Advisor

Date

2024

Keywords

life satisfaction, living alone, aging, immigrant, Canadian-born, personality traits, subjective perception, CLSA

Abstract (summary)

Using data from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging, in this study we provide an alternative explanation for the gap of life satisfaction between living-alone immigrants and Canadian-born older adults. Based on the Big-Five personality traits, we use the latent class analysis to generate two types of social dispositions, social independence and social dependence. With social dispositions taken into account, living alone contributes to life satisfaction in opposite ways for immigrant and Canadian-born older adults, by playing a negative role for the former group and a positive role for the latter. The trend of higher life satisfaction among the living-alone Canadian-born are mainly among the socially independent, whereas for immigrants, socially dependent older adults experience the lowest level of life satisfaction when living alone. Therefore, while socially independent Canadian-born older adults gain a “living-alone premium” in life satisfaction; their socially dependent immigrant counterparts experience a “living-alone penalty” in life satisfaction.

Publication Information

Shen, J., Tong, H., & Fuller-Thomson, E. (2024). Penalty versus premium: Social disposition differentiates life satisfaction among living-alone immigrant and native-born older adults—findings from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA). The International Journal of Aging & Human Development, 00914150241268089. https://doi.org/10.1177/00914150241268089

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

Rights

All Rights Reserved