A growing body of research is starting to shed light on the ways child care subsidies are achieving one of their central goals—supporting employment for low-income parents. Second in the series Reviews of Research on Child Care Subsidies, this research brief summarizes the Research Connections literature review of the same title, Parent Employment and the Use of Child Care Subsidies, which examines recent research addressing the basic question: What parent employment outcomes are associated with the use of child care subsidies? That is, how do employment decisions and patterns for low-income parents with subsidies tend to differ from those of low-income parents without them? For which subgroups of these parents—such as, those with or withou...
The high cost of child care is a barrier to employment among low-income families with young children...
Using a recent cohort of single mothers who received child care subsidies, this study explores the e...
This paper estimates the effect of child care subsidies on the standard work decision of single moth...
A review of research studies examining parent employment outcomes associated with the use of child c...
A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employm...
A table summarizing the research questions, groups studied, methods, validity and reliability issues...
In 2004, spending on child care subsides from the main U.S. public funding sources—Child Care and De...
A review of research on factors influencing child care subsidy use among eligible families
Work requirements implemented through welfare reform have led to a focus on moving mothers into empl...
A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employm...
Quality child care appears to have a positive effect on the school readiness of children with low in...
This paper provides an analysis of child care subsidies under welfare reform. Previous studies of ch...
Based on interviews, examines how low earnings, job instability, workplace inflexibility with irregu...
This research study analyzes child care subsidy (CCS) participation and employment outcomes among lo...
Child care subsidies and the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) are vital government tools for increasi...
The high cost of child care is a barrier to employment among low-income families with young children...
Using a recent cohort of single mothers who received child care subsidies, this study explores the e...
This paper estimates the effect of child care subsidies on the standard work decision of single moth...
A review of research studies examining parent employment outcomes associated with the use of child c...
A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employm...
A table summarizing the research questions, groups studied, methods, validity and reliability issues...
In 2004, spending on child care subsides from the main U.S. public funding sources—Child Care and De...
A review of research on factors influencing child care subsidy use among eligible families
Work requirements implemented through welfare reform have led to a focus on moving mothers into empl...
A compilation of selected Research Connections resources focused on the relationship between employm...
Quality child care appears to have a positive effect on the school readiness of children with low in...
This paper provides an analysis of child care subsidies under welfare reform. Previous studies of ch...
Based on interviews, examines how low earnings, job instability, workplace inflexibility with irregu...
This research study analyzes child care subsidy (CCS) participation and employment outcomes among lo...
Child care subsidies and the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) are vital government tools for increasi...
The high cost of child care is a barrier to employment among low-income families with young children...
Using a recent cohort of single mothers who received child care subsidies, this study explores the e...
This paper estimates the effect of child care subsidies on the standard work decision of single moth...