In 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal child care for 0-3 year old children was launched in Wallonia, the French-speaking part of Belgium. This paper is interested in evaluating if this increased availability of formal child care resultedin a higher employment rate for women with at least one child under 3. To this end, we use a difference-in-differences approach based on municipality-level panel data, taking advantage of the fact that the increase in availability of formal child care differed greatly across municipalities. We find that the raise in child care availability significantly increased the maternal employment rate, but to a lesser extent than expected, most likely because of a substanti...
Childbearing is often associated with employment interruptions in women’s careers. Since 2005, the G...
We estimate the causal effects of childcare availability on the maternal employment rate using prefe...
This paper addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalised childcare influen...
peer reviewedIn 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal chil...
In 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal child care for 0-...
The theoretically well-grounded hypothesis that the availability of formal childcare has a positive ...
According to many studies, childcare is important for its pedagogical, economical and social functio...
Motherhood affects mothers’ professional career in different ways: it can cause them to quit their j...
This paper analyses how maternal labor supply responds to the price and availability of childcare se...
In this paper, we investigate whether the expansion of childcare leads to an increase in the female ...
Using a natural experiment framework, we study the effects of offering full-time public childcare fo...
This paper analyses how maternal labor supply relates to the availability of childcare services in f...
We estimate the causal effects of childcare availability on the maternal employment rate using prefe...
This article addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalized childcare influ...
This paper investigates the effects of public child care availability in Italy in mothers’ working s...
Childbearing is often associated with employment interruptions in women’s careers. Since 2005, the G...
We estimate the causal effects of childcare availability on the maternal employment rate using prefe...
This paper addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalised childcare influen...
peer reviewedIn 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal chil...
In 2003, a new multi-annual program aimed at increasing the availability of formal child care for 0-...
The theoretically well-grounded hypothesis that the availability of formal childcare has a positive ...
According to many studies, childcare is important for its pedagogical, economical and social functio...
Motherhood affects mothers’ professional career in different ways: it can cause them to quit their j...
This paper analyses how maternal labor supply responds to the price and availability of childcare se...
In this paper, we investigate whether the expansion of childcare leads to an increase in the female ...
Using a natural experiment framework, we study the effects of offering full-time public childcare fo...
This paper analyses how maternal labor supply relates to the availability of childcare services in f...
We estimate the causal effects of childcare availability on the maternal employment rate using prefe...
This article addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalized childcare influ...
This paper investigates the effects of public child care availability in Italy in mothers’ working s...
Childbearing is often associated with employment interruptions in women’s careers. Since 2005, the G...
We estimate the causal effects of childcare availability on the maternal employment rate using prefe...
This paper addresses the question whether geographical access to institutionalised childcare influen...