In an influential article, Sherwin Rosen (1997) argues that Swedish subsidies of child care services lead to a substantial misallocation of resources that slows economic growth. We offer two major reasons why Rosen's approach is flawed. First and foremost, he ignores the positive externalities of increasing the quality of child care, despite their clear relevance to his general equilibrium model. Second, he overlooks distributional impacts, despite evidence that child care subsidies redistribute the costs of children between men and women, rich and poor, young and old. By exploring these and a number of smaller problems with Rosen's model we hope to encourage the development of more systematic efforts to explore the effects of state support...
This paper examines how social security reform and childcare support affect fertility and social wel...
We assess the case for universal child care programs in the context of a Norwegian reform which led ...
This paper analyses the effects of the introduction of child-subsidy support policies extending rece...
A recent study of the welfare state in Sweden, Rosen (1995, 1996, 1997), concludes that child care s...
A methodology to describe the distributional and behavioural effects of child care subsidies is pres...
Given the wide use of childcare subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
The effects of a recent Swedish child-care fee reform are compared with those of an alternative refo...
What would be the aggregate effects of adopting a more generous and universal childcare subsidy prog...
The main goal of this paper is to unravel the social distribution of childcare policies: who benefi t...
We examine how subsidy policies to support child-rearing of households affect the fertility rate in ...
Given the wide use of child care subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
and the 2010 meetings of the European Society of Population Economics for helpful comments and sugge...
In recent years, the use of childcare especially in rich countries, has gone through a huge developm...
From 1999, all parents in Norway with children aged one to three, who did not attend publicly subsid...
This paper examines how social security reform and childcare support affect fertility and social wel...
This paper examines how social security reform and childcare support affect fertility and social wel...
We assess the case for universal child care programs in the context of a Norwegian reform which led ...
This paper analyses the effects of the introduction of child-subsidy support policies extending rece...
A recent study of the welfare state in Sweden, Rosen (1995, 1996, 1997), concludes that child care s...
A methodology to describe the distributional and behavioural effects of child care subsidies is pres...
Given the wide use of childcare subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
The effects of a recent Swedish child-care fee reform are compared with those of an alternative refo...
What would be the aggregate effects of adopting a more generous and universal childcare subsidy prog...
The main goal of this paper is to unravel the social distribution of childcare policies: who benefi t...
We examine how subsidy policies to support child-rearing of households affect the fertility rate in ...
Given the wide use of child care subsidies across countries, it is surprising how little we know abo...
and the 2010 meetings of the European Society of Population Economics for helpful comments and sugge...
In recent years, the use of childcare especially in rich countries, has gone through a huge developm...
From 1999, all parents in Norway with children aged one to three, who did not attend publicly subsid...
This paper examines how social security reform and childcare support affect fertility and social wel...
This paper examines how social security reform and childcare support affect fertility and social wel...
We assess the case for universal child care programs in the context of a Norwegian reform which led ...
This paper analyses the effects of the introduction of child-subsidy support policies extending rece...