Child Care and Mothers' Employment Decisions

Working Paper: NBER ID: w7058

Authors: Patricia M. Anderson; Phillip B. Levine

Abstract: Rising female labor force participation and recent changes to the welfare system have increased the importance of child care for all women and, particularly, the less-skilled. This paper focuses on the child care decisions of women who differ by their skill level and the role that costs play in their work decision. After reviewing government child-care programs targeted at less-skilled women, we present a descriptive analysis of current utilization and child care costs. We emphasize differences across skill groups, showing that the least-skilled women both use less costly paid care and are more likely to use unpaid care. We then survey the existing evidence regarding the responsiveness of female labor supply to child care costs, reviewing both econometric studies and demonstration projects that include child care components. To investigate variation in the response to child care cost across skill levels, we implement models similar to this past literature. We conclude that while the overall elasticity of labor force participation with respect to the market price of child care is between -0.05 and -0.35, this elasticity is larger for the least skilled women and declines with skill. Throughout the paper, we reflect upon the implications of our analysis for welfare reform.

Keywords: child care; mothers' employment; labor supply; welfare reform

JEL Codes: J13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
child care costs (J13)labor force participation (J22)
child care costs (J13)labor supply decisions (J22)
skill level (J24)labor supply (J20)
child care costs (J13)employment decisions (M51)
skill level (J24)labor supply response to child care costs (J39)

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