According to the Luxembourg Income Study data, the United States child poverty rate is the second highest among 15 high-income nations. The present work reveals that 55% of all American children living in a household headed by a single female with no other adult live in poverty —the highest rate for any of the five living arrangements in the 15 countries examined by this Study. While previous analyses have focused on market forces and governmental redistribution across households, we question the contribution of demographic factors that place children in family structures with different poverty risks relative to other factors such as differential market opportunities and governmental benefits for adults caring for children in various living...
AbstractChen and Ravallion’s estimates of global extreme poverty rates are well known. This note, by...
This paper uses data from the 19932001 March Current Population Survey to estimate the extent to whi...
Child poverty is an immense societal problem because of the unnecessary hardship it creates for the ...
The United States has greater income inequality and higher child poverty than any other industrializ...
This article was published in Demography, v. 45:1 (2008), pp. 173-191 (DOI 10.1353/dem.2008.0007). T...
This paper compares child poverty dynamics cross-nationally using panel data from seven nations: the...
Children in nonmarried families are at greater risk for poverty and especially so during a time of m...
Children in the United States are more likely than ever before to spend part of their lives in singl...
Despite very different macroeconomic conditions, demographic structures and degrees of income inequa...
Income inequality has increased steadily over the past 40 years. We briefly review the nature and ca...
The growing number of countries with large child cohort studies offers an unprecedented opportunity ...
Chen and Ravallion’s estimates of global extreme poverty rates are well known. This note, by conside...
How did the economic situation of children develop across 17 Organisation for Economic and Co-operat...
Using data from the Luxembourg Income Study, I study the sensitivity of cross-national income povert...
A child poverty rate of ten percent could mean that every tenth child is always poor, or that all ch...
AbstractChen and Ravallion’s estimates of global extreme poverty rates are well known. This note, by...
This paper uses data from the 19932001 March Current Population Survey to estimate the extent to whi...
Child poverty is an immense societal problem because of the unnecessary hardship it creates for the ...
The United States has greater income inequality and higher child poverty than any other industrializ...
This article was published in Demography, v. 45:1 (2008), pp. 173-191 (DOI 10.1353/dem.2008.0007). T...
This paper compares child poverty dynamics cross-nationally using panel data from seven nations: the...
Children in nonmarried families are at greater risk for poverty and especially so during a time of m...
Children in the United States are more likely than ever before to spend part of their lives in singl...
Despite very different macroeconomic conditions, demographic structures and degrees of income inequa...
Income inequality has increased steadily over the past 40 years. We briefly review the nature and ca...
The growing number of countries with large child cohort studies offers an unprecedented opportunity ...
Chen and Ravallion’s estimates of global extreme poverty rates are well known. This note, by conside...
How did the economic situation of children develop across 17 Organisation for Economic and Co-operat...
Using data from the Luxembourg Income Study, I study the sensitivity of cross-national income povert...
A child poverty rate of ten percent could mean that every tenth child is always poor, or that all ch...
AbstractChen and Ravallion’s estimates of global extreme poverty rates are well known. This note, by...
This paper uses data from the 19932001 March Current Population Survey to estimate the extent to whi...
Child poverty is an immense societal problem because of the unnecessary hardship it creates for the ...