Northern Outlook

Valuing grandparen­ts

- ROB STOCK

Grandparen­ts. You can’t put a price on them.

One British insurer tried. It calculated that on average, on childcare costs alone, grandparen­ts were worth £2000 (NZ$3890) a year to young, working couples with children.

But even that was a halfhearte­d attempt really.

That was the cost of childcare the average British grandparen­ts provided for grandchild­ren every year.

It didn’t take any account of the impact on couple’s ability to maintain a high enough income to buy a house, and make headway on the mortgage.

And you’d be right to protest at reducing the value of grandparen­ts to the monetary value of the childcare they provide.

You’d also be right to say that the British insurer’s estimate undervalue­d even that contributi­on.

The actual monetary value to parents is much wider. It includes the extra income, and career progressio­n parents can make, for one thing.

In one sense grandparen­ts’ childcare contributi­ons are a positive, helping their families thrive.

In another, there’s an element of grandparen­ts taking on unpaid work as a result of employers’ demands on individual­s, and on our cost of living crisis (house prices, rent costs, food prices, rates, power prices, petrol prices, insurance premiums – all of which we pay over the odds for) driving two working parent households.

This is about grandparen­ts helping their children survive.

At the very least it is them stepping in to prevent their grandchild­ren being placed in before and after school care every day.

Grandparen­ts living with their children and grandchild­ren provide a kind of mutual support to each other.

Living on NZ Super alone isn’t particular­ly easy, so cohabitati­on helps both parties get by. And having someone to get the kids off to school and to be there to pick them up when you are doing a split shift cleaning

offices from 5am-9am, and then from 4pm-10pm is handy.

In 2009, there was a bit of government research here that did provide a few insights, though it was based on a small sample.

In some parts of our society (notably lower socio-economic) as many as a quarter to fourtenths of families include both a grandparen­t and a grandchild.

In all there were more grandparen­ts living in homes with grandchild­ren than there were people in Gisborne, or Whanganui.

Some grandparen­ts had put their interests on the backburner to help family, the research found.

As a society we tend to overlook the contributi­ons of older people. We forget people over the age of 65 are workers, volunteers, taxpayers, consumers and pass significan­t amounts of wealth on to the next generation.

Take the example of volunteer work done by the over 65s. The Office for Senior Citizens estimated it to have an economic value of their volunteeri­ng (based on the minimum wage) was $8.5 billion in 2011.

Take that away and there’d be a heap of work that would need somebody to pay for it.

‘‘Dennison does more than enough to suggest he’ll be back for episode three.

 ??  ?? Grandparen­ts: Wanted by all. Worth a mint to families.
Grandparen­ts: Wanted by all. Worth a mint to families.
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