01660nam a22001457a 4500999001900000008004100019100005300060245016100113260003300274300003400307520102500341773003301366942000701399952010801406 c533178d533178260428b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aRani, Varsha and Ugargol, Allen Prabhaker960295 aSanctuary in numbers or security in personal income? : Decoupling the effects of financial independence and family size on the mental health of older adults aEconomic & Political Weekly  a 61(9), Feb 28, 2026: p.85-91 aIndia’s policy framework relies on the increasingly tenuous premise that the multigenerational household functions as a sufficient safety net. This paper critiques the conflation of household economic status with individual well-being. Using data from the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India, we decouple the effects of financial autonomy and household structure. Stratified analysis reveals a dual reality: first, a “universal autonomy” effect, where individual income reduces distress odds across all strata, confirming that household wealth is no substitute for personal agency. Second, “sanctuary in numbers” operates as a graded necessity, existential for the poor but attenuated for the wealthy. These findings demand a paradigm shift from poverty-targeted schemes to universal social pensions that recognise financial autonomy as a distinct determinant of mental health.-Reproduced https://www.epw.in/journal/2026/9/ageing-health-and-social-security/sanctuary-numbers-or-security-personal-income.html  aEconomic & Political Weekly  cAR 00102ddc40709408349aIIPAbIIPAd2026-04-28h61(9), Feb 28, 2026: p.85-91pAR138690r2026-04-28yAR