The interplay of Taiwan ’s childlessness, aging population, longevity, and the work of women ’s roles, along with the prevalence of neoliberalism and the trend of a competitive society, has become a hidden concern for Taiwan ’s development. In recent years, care has become the main field of government intervention, and the welfare society has shaped the system of women's work and care. Based on the care and work experience of different generations of women, this article constructs a pattern of life processes that differentiates generations of women, and finds that government action has been involved in the transition of care division and the reorganization of female labor to ease the crisis of care and unemployment. Only by putting the life course patterns of women of different generations in a larger political and economic framework can we expose the pattern of exploitation of women by the system from generation to generation, and look into the care traps in government policies and measures to achieve the goal of truly liberating women .
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