This paper asks whether targeting welfare benefits to women can be effective at changing household spending. We provide empirical evidence on this question by using a reform to the UK tax-credit system in 2003 as a quasi-experiment. We find that the reform caused low-income households to reallocate spending towards children's goods. The results further demonstrate that the effects of directing welfare benefits to women can extend beyond child expenditures to goods that are collectively consumed by all household members. Our findings are in contrast to those from earlier studies that took place in the economic setting of 1970s UK
The evidence that the same income can lead to different household decisions, depending on who the e...
The introduction of the 1999 Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) in the UK encouraged low income fami...
There is no shortage of proposals to reform the income tax and social welfare systems. Reports by th...
Does the within-household distribution of income influence household consumption patterns, and child...
This paper examines the effects of theWorking Families’ Tax Credit (WFTC) on couples in Britain. We ...
The introduction of the 1999 Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) in the UK encouraged low income fami...
This paper provides evidence on the effect of welfare reform on fertility, focusing on UK reforms in...
In 1999 the UK government made major reforms to the system of child-contingent benefits, including t...
We examine the implications of an income redistribution from men to women for the welfare of mothers...
This paper studies the differential effect of targeting cash transfers to men or women on the struct...
Over much of the developed world governments make significant financial transfers to parents with de...
acknowledged. Recent research on household behavior suggests that, ceteris paribus, a woman’s "...
Recent research on household behavior suggests that, ceteris paribus, a woman’s "power" within a hou...
We examine how taxes and transfers affect the incomes of men and women. Using microsimulation and in...
Abstract: This paper is concerned with modelling household decisions and the welfare effects of tax ...
The evidence that the same income can lead to different household decisions, depending on who the e...
The introduction of the 1999 Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) in the UK encouraged low income fami...
There is no shortage of proposals to reform the income tax and social welfare systems. Reports by th...
Does the within-household distribution of income influence household consumption patterns, and child...
This paper examines the effects of theWorking Families’ Tax Credit (WFTC) on couples in Britain. We ...
The introduction of the 1999 Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) in the UK encouraged low income fami...
This paper provides evidence on the effect of welfare reform on fertility, focusing on UK reforms in...
In 1999 the UK government made major reforms to the system of child-contingent benefits, including t...
We examine the implications of an income redistribution from men to women for the welfare of mothers...
This paper studies the differential effect of targeting cash transfers to men or women on the struct...
Over much of the developed world governments make significant financial transfers to parents with de...
acknowledged. Recent research on household behavior suggests that, ceteris paribus, a woman’s "...
Recent research on household behavior suggests that, ceteris paribus, a woman’s "power" within a hou...
We examine how taxes and transfers affect the incomes of men and women. Using microsimulation and in...
Abstract: This paper is concerned with modelling household decisions and the welfare effects of tax ...
The evidence that the same income can lead to different household decisions, depending on who the e...
The introduction of the 1999 Working Families Tax Credit (WFTC) in the UK encouraged low income fami...
There is no shortage of proposals to reform the income tax and social welfare systems. Reports by th...