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Summary of Key Findings for Working Paper No. 17
Background
Over the past decade, employment among single
mothers rose dramatically, with most observers attributing
a portion of that increase to welfare reform. Yet in the 1990s,
federal and state governments changed not only welfare rules,
but also policies related to child care, which is an important
support of employment for low-income families. To what extent
have child care policies encouraged or enabled single mothers
to work, and conversely, to what extent has child care use
increased as a result of increased employment that was induced
by welfare reform? This paper exploits the random assignment
design of 6 studies testing 19 welfare programs that began
between 1993 and 1996 to examine the role of welfare, employment
and child care policies on child care and employment decisions.
Key Findings
- Welfare reform programs that increased employment
also increased use of nonmaternal child care, especially
paid care.
- Despite the relationship between impacts
on employment and use of paid care, impacts on employment
were seldom matched by increases in use of child care subsidies,
indicating that many newly employed families paid for care
without receiving subsidies.
- Welfare reform programs had similar impacts
on employment and on child care use for parents who reported
child care barriers at the start of the studies and those
who did not report such barriers.
- There is little evidence to suggest that
the welfare programs with expanded child care assistance
produced larger or more pronounced effects on employment,
including more stable employment, as compared to the welfare
programs that provided the same level of child care assistance
to program and control group families.
Conclusions and Implications
These findings imply that many newly employed
welfare and low-income families are not receiving child care
subsidies. In some cases, this may be because of personal
preferences that do not align with child care subsidy rules,
but there might be other barriers that keep families from
using subsidies, suggesting that there is still room for improvement
despite the vast expansions in child care funding of the last
decade. The findings also suggest that expanded child care
policies did not dramatically affect the employment of welfare-reliant
and low-income parents. However, because employment policies
in these welfare programs were always combined with some child
care assistance, further research is needed to ascertain the
role of varying levels of child care assistance in encouraging
employment.
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