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Summary of Key Findings for Working Paper No. 18
Background
One of the primary goals of the Personal Responsibility and
Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) has been to move
welfare recipients into work and economic self-sufficiency.
It is well known that child care costs often create a significant
barrier to employment among parents with young children, particularly
among low-income families receiving welfare or among families
having a previous welfare history. Using data from four random
assignment studies that tested ten welfare and employment
programs, this working paper examines the impact of welfare
reform policies on the child care decisions of families. Responses
are measured for the combined sample of families participating
in these programs as well as for each program separately.
Responses are also measured separately for families that left
welfare and for families that stayed on welfare during the
study period.
Key Findings
- The ten experimental programs increased average employment
by almost 7 percentage points. This impact was measured between
two and four years after the programs began operating.
- The percentage of school-age children using any child care
increased by about the same amount as the percentage of parents
who were employed. Most of the increased child care was informal
care provided by a relative, particularly by a sibling or
a grandparent. There was also a small, statistically insignificant
increase in the use of formal child care.
- There are significant differences in the employment and
child care impacts across the various programs tested. The
employment impacts ranged from -4 to +14 percentage points,
and the child care impacts ranged from -3 to +14 percentage
points.
- Although child care impacts are larger for welfare leavers
(reflecting the larger employment impacts), they are not significantly
different from the child care impacts of welfare stayers.
Conclusions and Implications
The results confirm expectations that welfare reform creates
an additional need for child care. However, because most of
the children studied here were of school age when their parents'
child care choices were observed, the additional need was
met mostly through informal sources, primarily care provided
by relatives. Because care by a relative is often provided
a little or no cost, the welfare reform programs did not create
any additional program costs. However, current welfare reform
programs that offer more generous child care subsidies could
stimulate more employment and subsidy use among parents of
children in this age group and, hence, could generate higher
program costs. |