Place in Ageing: The Housing Experiences of Older Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand

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INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS PROGRAMME 2007 2012 Place in Ageing: The Housing Experiences of Older Chinese Immigrants in New Zealand Elsie Ho University of Auckland Wendy Li James Cook University

Outline Ageing in Place Place and ageing Migration and place The Chinese case study Reasons for coming to NZ Housing trajectories since arrival Discussion Role of older people in migrant families Attachment to place/sense of belonging

In NZ, ageing in place refers to people s ability to make choices in later life about where to live, and receive the support to do so (Ministry of Social Policy, 2001, p.10) It was identified as a priority goal in the NZ Positive Ageing Strategy (2001) Ageing in Place

Place and ageing The significance of Place in ageing Elderly people, including those in need of care and support should, wherever possible, be enabled to continue living in their own homes, and where this is not possible, they should be enabled to live in a sheltered and supportive environment which is as close to their community as possible, in both the social and the geographical sense (OECD, 1994, p.3)

Migration and Place Why do people move to a new country in later life? 2006 Census N % People aged 65+ born overseas, resident overseas in 2001 8,841 100 Chinese 1,719 19 Indian 990 11 Korean 228 3 Total Asian 3,396 38

Participants Older Chinese migrants from 20 households Age (in 2008): 62-77 years; Mean = 70 Years in NZ (in 2008): 3-12 years; Mean = 8 Years of children s residence in NZ when they arrived: 2-5 years Pre-migration home ownership: 100%

Reasons for coming to NZ Filial Piety investment: 75% We look after our grandchildren now, and our children will in turn look after us when we are very old Filial piety demonstration: 25% Our children invited us to NZ to enjoy a new lifestyle and retirement

Their housing trajectories Number of moves after migration Why they moved Changes in living arrangements

Were they relatively permanently settled? No. of moves from arrival 66 100% to 2010 In the first five years 48 73% After 5 years 18 27% More than 80% of older New Zealanders did not move in the past 5 years (van de Pas, 2009)

Why they moved Reasons for moving Number Percent Children s career relocation/ 25 36 development Housing improvement 18 26 Change in family composition 9 13 Intergenerational issues 8 12 Health concerns 5 7 Filial harmony 4 6 Total 69 100

Intergenerational relationship issues Different lifestyles We older people love to eat Chinese noodles for our breakfast. Our children and grandchildren like cornflakes. We like Chinese vegetables. They like chicken, beef steaks and sausages. Financial issues we ve got benefits from the Government. The money is given to us by the Government. It s not our daughter s money. However, our daughter manages our money because we are unable to deal with English documents. Our money is mainly used to help her in paying her mortgage. Yes, we are willing to help her. But umm Who doesn t want to be financially independent? Who doesn t want to have freedom to spend his or her own money?

Intergenerational relationship issues Western parenting vs. Chinese grandparenting Our daughter and son-in-law have different directions which confuse our grandson. They often provided opposing ideas to our grandson. They told me that they were offering options to our grandson so that he could make his own decisions. But I don t agree with the somewhat Westernised way in which they raise our grandson. But I try not to say anything about their parenting.

Current living arrangements Number Percent Parent-child co-residence 5 25 In NZ 3 10 Overseas 2 15 Parent & child living apart 15 75 In NZ 6 30 Parent in NZ; Child overseas 7 35 Overseas 2 10 Total 20 100

Discussion Older people an important family resource Look after grandchildren & transmit the Chinese culture onto the next generation Assist with domestic chores to enable adult children to establish themselves in the new country Look after children s investment properties and tenants

Discussion Challenges after relocation Issues with co-residency Different life cycles between older people and their adult children Place attachment / support networks Health / superannuation / aged care Fear of being a burden / filial harmony Triple H: Housing, health, harmony

INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS PROGRAMME 2007 2012