| Summary of Key Findings from Working Paper No.4-6
Background
Drawing
on longitudinal ethnographic data from the Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation’s Project on Devolution and Urban Change,
this three-paper series examines how the welfare to work transitions
experienced by welfare-reliant women in Cleveland and Philadelphia
have affected them, their children, and their family life.
The first paper, My
Children Come First, describes what the women anticipated
the effects of going to work would be for their families before
they entered (or re-entered) the labor market. Unstable
Work, Unstable Income, examines the effect of welfare
reform’s work requirements on family well being through changes
in employment and income. Finally, Juggling
Low-Wage Work and Family Life explores how women
experienced work and how they thought work affected their
children and families.
Key Findings
- The women reported that they were eager to work and optimistic
about their futures as they anticipated employment would
provide greater income and material well being for their
children, improvements to their own and their children’s
self-esteem, and an opportunity to become better role-models
for their children. They worried, however, about the effects
their increased absence from the household would have on
their children, and they were particularly concerned about
the availability of trustworthy, affordable child care and
the consequences of their children spending time unsupervised.
- Only among the small group of women whose earnings were
high enough to satisfy their family’s basic needs and provide
extras that improved the quality of their lives were expectations
of greater material well being met. For most women, however,
earnings were not sufficiently large to change their material
circumstances substantially. Among those whose employment
was unstable or did not increase income much (the most common
outcome), their families derived fewer benefits from work,
experienced more disruption in family routines, and sometimes
reported being worse off than they were on welfare.
- The newly employed mothers were acutely aware of unanticipated
new costs — both financial and emotional — that came with
having to accommodate work and family obligations. They
negotiated the various work-family trade-offs by developing
normative frameworks for making sense of their choices and
actions, as well as concrete strategies for meeting the
high demands of family care and paid labor outside of the
home.
Conclusions and Implications
The
findings of these papers are broadly consistent with those
from other Next Generation studies that have used very different
methodologies to evaluate experimental “make work pay” programs.
In particular, recent evidence from experimental evaluations
of such programs indicates that those that increased maternal
employment and income through earnings supplements improved
outcomes for children. In this sample, the relatively small
subgroup of women who left welfare for work and substantially
increased their incomes reported that they and their children
were generally better off. Those who did not experience sustained
increases in income reported more mixed outcomes; there were
some benefits of going to work, but women worried about potential
(and in some cases, observed) negative effects on their children.
This
convergence of evidence has special relevance for public policy
makers. Both the ethnographic and experimental findings make
clear the importance of continuing to develop and fund work
supports that not only “make work pay,” but also enable single
parents to sustain their employment and family obligations.
These findings underscore the importance of continuing to
expand low-income child care programs (including after-school
care), transportation subsidies, medical insurance for low-income
adults and children, the earned income tax credit, and earned
income disregards.
Unstable Work, Unstable Income:Implications for
Family Well-Being in the Era of Time-Limited Welfare.
Working Paper No. 5. 2001.
Ellen K. Scott, Kathryn Edin, Andrew S. London, and Rebessa Joyce Kissane.
To obtain a copy of this paper, contact Ellen K. Scott (541)
346-5075.
Juggling Low-Wage Work and Family Life: What Mothers
Say About Their Childrens Well-Being in the Context of Welfare Reform.
Working Paper No. 6. 2001.
Andrew S. London, Ellen K. Scott, Kathryn Edin, and Vicki Hunter.
To obtain a copy of this paper, contact Andrew S. London (330)
672-3712 |