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Current Filters: New in five years [remove]; Pub Year:2004 [remove]; Classification:Child Care & Early Education Expenses [remove];
7 results found.|
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The bottom line: Setting the real standard for Bay Area working families A study of the amount of money required to meet the cost of living in the San Fransisco Bay Area, which takes into account basic essentials, such as food and transportation, as well as child care and health care |
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Caring for young children: Inequality in the cost burden of child care An examination of the proportion of income parents spend on child care using Survey of Income and Program Participation and Current Population Survey Data |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care costs and mothers’ labor supply: An empirical analysis for Germany An examination of the relationship between family child care expenses and maternal employment, based on data on families who participated in the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP) in 2002 |
Reports & Papers |
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Household childcare choices and women's work behavior in Russia A study using nationally representative data to examine the relation between Russian women's employment patterns and their use of formal and informal child care, specifically investigating how child care costs affect the number of hours that they work |
Reports & Papers |
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How parents evaluate child care: A factorial survey analysis of perceptions of child care quality, fair market price and willingness to pay by low-income, African American mothers An examination of methods used by low income families to evaluate child care quality, based on a sample of 143 low income African American mothers from the Philadelphia metropolitan area |
Reports & Papers
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Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) 2001 Panel A longitudinal panel survey of demographic information, income, labor force characteristics, and program participation in the United States with supplemental topical modules including questions on topics such as child support, child health care, child care, and child well-being. |
Data Sets
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The value of employer-sponsored child care to employees An estimation of the value that employees place on employer-sponsored child care (ESCC) benefits, using the contingent-valuation method, based on data from interviews with 904 employees from three same-industry firms |
Reports & Papers |
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Peer Reviewed Journal