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Child care subsidies and the employment of welfare recipients
Meyers, Marcia K., 1999
(Working Paper No. 15). Berkeley: University of California, Berkeley, UC Data Archive & Technical Assistance.

A study examining the probability that low-income single mothers in California will receive child care subsidies and the effect this has on their employment.

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Child care subsidies and the employment of welfare recipients
Meyers, Marcia K., 2002
Demography, 39(1), 165-179

A study examining the probability that low-income single mothers in California will receive child care subsidies and the effect this has on their labor market activity

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Child care devolution in Texas: The relationship of child care policies to subsidy, employment and market durations
Schexnayder, Deanna, March 2008
The University of Texas at Austin

An overview of a study of the relationship between child care policies and subsidy, employment, and market outcomes, during the period of localization (devolution) of the management of child care subsidy policy in Texas, based on the findings of an econometric analysis

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Child care subsidies and employment behavior among very-low-income populations in three states
Cochi Ficano, Carlena K., May 2006
The Review of Policy Research, 23(3), 681-698

An empirical analysis of the effects of child care subsidies on recipients' transition times to substantial employment, using merged administrative data from Florida, Minnesota, and Connecticut's welfare reform evaluations

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Child care subsidies and employment behavior among very-low-income populations in three states
Cochi Ficano, Carlena K., May 2006
The Review of Policy Research, 23(3), 681-698

An estimation of the effect of child care subsidies on single parent welfare recipients’ period of transition to substantial employment

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Child care subsidy receipt, employment, and child care choices of single mothers
Tekin, Erdal, October 2005
Economics Letters, 89(1), 1-6

An examination of the effects of child care subsidies on the employment and child care choices of single mothers

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Child care subsidy receipt, employment, and child care choices of single mothers
Tekin, Erdal, 2004
(NBER Working Paper Series No. 10459). Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.

A study of the influence of subsidy receipt on the employment rates and child care choices of single mothers, based on questionnaire responses, collected in 1999, from 2,226 single mothers in a nationally representative sample of American families

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Child care subsidy use and employment outcomes: Key Topic Resource List
Child Care & Early Education Research Connections, December, 2012
(2nd ed.). New York: Child Care & Early Education Research Connections

A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employment outcomes and receipt of child care subsidies, including research on subsidy receipt and employment outcomes of Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) recipients and other low income families

Bibliographies


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Rural-urban differences in childcare subsidy use and employment stability
Davis, Elizabeth E., Spring 2010
Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy, 32(1), 135-153

An analysis of the dynamics of program participation and employment stability for rural and urban families in Oregon's child care subsidy program, from an analysis of state adminstrative data from 27,628 single-parent families who entered between October 1998 and September 2000

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Child care assistance helps families work: A review of the effects of subsidy receipt on employment
Matthews, Hannah, 2006
Washington, DC: Center for Law and Social Policy.

A policy brief presenting research findings on the relationship between child care subsidy receipt and mothers' employment

Fact Sheets & Briefs


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Child care subsidy use and employment outcomes of TANF and other low-income families: Key Topic Resource List
Child Care & Early Education Research Connections, November 2006
New York: Child Care & Early Education Research Connections

A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employment outcomes and receipt of child care subsidies and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF), including research on the subsidy receipt and employment outcomes of former welfare recipients and low-income families

Bibliographies


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Child care subsidy use and employment outcomes of TANF mothers during the early years of welfare reform: A three-state study
Lee, Bong Joo, 2004
(Chapin Hall Working Paper). Chicago: University of Chicago, Chapin Hall Center for Children.

An analysis of the child care subsidy take-up rate, type of child care chosen, and relation between child care subsidy use and employment outcomes for single working mothers receiving TANF in Illinois, Maryland and Massachusetts

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Parent employment and the use of child care subsidies
Schaefer, Stephanie A., April 2006
New York: Child Care & Early Education Research Connections

A review of research studies examining parent employment outcomes associated with the use of child care subsidies

Literature Review


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Oregon's employment-related child-care subsidy program: An investment that makes employment work for low-wage families
Scott, Ellen K., January, 2011
Eugene: University of Oregon.

A summary of a study of Oregon parents' employment, child care arrangements, and child care subsidy experiences before and after changes to state child care subsidy policy in 2007, based on interviews with 44 subsidy recipients and 15 of their child care providers

Fact Sheets & Briefs


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Parent employment and the use of child care subsidies [Research brief]
Lawrence, Sharmila, June 2006
New York: Child Care & Early Education Research Connections

A summary of a review of research studies examining parent employment outcomes associated with the use of child care subsidies

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Parent employment and the use of child care subsidies: Table of methods and findings
Schaefer, Stephanie A., 2006
New York: Child Care & Early Education Research Connections

A table summarizing the research questions, groups studied, methods, validity and reliability issues, and findings of studies discussed in an accompanying literature review examining parent employment outcomes associated with the use of child care subsidies

Table Of Findings


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Participation and employment dynamics of child care subsidy users in rural and urban Oregon
Davis, Elizabeth E., February 2007
(RPRC Working Paper No. 07-01). Corvallis, OR: RUPRI Rural Poverty Research Center.

An examination of rural-urban differences in the use of public programs designed to support working low-income families, such as child care subsidies and food stamps, based on a comparison of demographic characteristics, employment stability, participation in work support programs, and other data

Reports & Papers


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Employment and earnings of child-care subsidy recipients in Harris County, Texas
Olson, Jerome A., June 2002
Austin: University of Texas at Austin, Ray Marshall Center for the Study of Human Resources.

An identification of the economic, personal, and policy variables influencing employment and earnings among recipients of subsidized child care in Harris County, Texas, during a period of welfare reform

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Child care subsidy, child care costs, and employment of low-income single mothers
Ahn, Haksoon, February, 2012
Children and Youth Services Review, 34(2), 379-387

An analysis of the relationship between welfare reform and child care costs among low income single mothers, and the correlation between post reform child care subsidy receipt and the status and duration of these mothers' employment, based on data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation, 1993, 1996, and 2001 panels

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Making employment work for low wage families: Oregon's employment-related child care subsidy program
Scott, Ellen K., January, 2010
Eugene: University of Oregon.

A summary of a study of Oregon child care subsidy recipients' work and subsidy experiences and child care costs, based on interviews with 24 subsidy recipients

Fact Sheets & Briefs


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Leaving welfare for employment: The role of child care subsidies for white, Hispanic, and African American families [Executive summary]
Shlay, Anne B., July 2007
Philadelphia: Temple University, Family and Children's Policy Collaborative.

A summary of a longitudinal study of welfare leavers' experiences with child care subsidies during the transition from the Temporary Assistance for Need Families (TANF) system to employment and the impact of child care subsidies on employment outcomes, as well as the relationship between race and ethnicity and subsidy use and employment outcomes, based on interviews with leavers

Executive Summary


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Leaving welfare for employment: The role of child care subsidies for white, Hispanic, and African American families
Shlay, Anne B., July 2007
Philadelphia: Temple University, Family and Children's Policy Collaborative.

A longitudinal study of child care subsidy utilization among former welfare recipients after leaving the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) child care subsidy system, the impact of child care subsidies on their employment outcomes, and differences in subsidy use and employment outcomes as a function of race and ethnicity, based on interviews with a sample of 658 African American, White, and Hispanic welfare leavers

Reports & Papers


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Changing policies, changing impacts: Employment and earnings of child-care subsidy recipients in the era of welfare reform
Queralt, Magaly, 2000
Social Service Review, 74(4), 588-619

A study that examines the employment and earnings of current and former recipients of welfare benefits and child care subsidies and assesses the impact of increased funding for child care and other policy changes.

Reports & Papers


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Employment and earnings of child-care subsidy recipients in Harris County, Texas [Executive summary]
Olson, Jerome A., June 2002
Austin: University of Texas at Austin, Ray Marshall Center for the Study of Human Resources.

A summary of an identification of the economic, personal, and policy variables influencing employment and earnings among recipients of subsidized child care in Harris County, Texas, during a period of welfare reform

Executive Summary


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Employment outcomes for low-income families receiving child care subsidies in Illinois, Maryland, and Texas
Goerge, Robert, August 18, 2009
Chicago: University of Chicago. Chapin Hall Center for Children

A study of the relationship between child care subsidy use and employment outcomes, and an identification of factors associated with child care subsidy use among eligible low income families, based on analysis of administrative and census data collected in Illinois, Maryland, and Texas

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Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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