There is a heated debate in the US, Canada and many European countries about introducing universally accessible child care. However, studies on universal child care and child development are scarce and only consider short-run outcomes. We analyze the introduction of universal child care in Norway, addressing the impact on children’s long-run outcomes. Our precise and robust difference-in-difference estimates show that child care had strong positive effects on children’s educational attainment and labor market participation, and also reduced welfare dependency. Subsample analysis indicates that children with low educated mothers and girls benefit the most from child care.universal child care; child development; long-run outcomes
Given the wide use of childcare subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
In 2006, the Universal Child Care Benefit was introduced in Canada for all children aged less than 6...
Growing evidence suggests that children’s participation in early childhood education and care (ECEC)...
There is a heated debate in the US and Canada, as well as in many European countries, about a move t...
There is a heated debate in the US, Canada and many European countries about introducing universally...
There is a heated debate in the US and Canada, as well as in many European countries, about a move t...
We assess the case for universal child care programs in the context of a Norwegian reform which led ...
Theory and evidence points towards particularly positive effects of high-quality child care for disa...
In this paper, we examine the heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care (preschool) ...
Encouraging effects from random assignments of intensive and high-quality early child care to disadv...
We examine heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care program in Germany by exploitin...
Abstract: Exploiting a rich panel data child survey merged with administrative records along with a ...
While most early childhood education and care (ECEC) programs taken to scale in the United States ha...
We examine heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care program in Germany by exploitin...
The strong correlation between child care and maternal employment rates has led previous research to...
Given the wide use of childcare subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
In 2006, the Universal Child Care Benefit was introduced in Canada for all children aged less than 6...
Growing evidence suggests that children’s participation in early childhood education and care (ECEC)...
There is a heated debate in the US and Canada, as well as in many European countries, about a move t...
There is a heated debate in the US, Canada and many European countries about introducing universally...
There is a heated debate in the US and Canada, as well as in many European countries, about a move t...
We assess the case for universal child care programs in the context of a Norwegian reform which led ...
Theory and evidence points towards particularly positive effects of high-quality child care for disa...
In this paper, we examine the heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care (preschool) ...
Encouraging effects from random assignments of intensive and high-quality early child care to disadv...
We examine heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care program in Germany by exploitin...
Abstract: Exploiting a rich panel data child survey merged with administrative records along with a ...
While most early childhood education and care (ECEC) programs taken to scale in the United States ha...
We examine heterogeneous treatment effects of a universal child care program in Germany by exploitin...
The strong correlation between child care and maternal employment rates has led previous research to...
Given the wide use of childcare subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
In 2006, the Universal Child Care Benefit was introduced in Canada for all children aged less than 6...
Growing evidence suggests that children’s participation in early childhood education and care (ECEC)...