Literature DB >> 31057320

First birth before first stable employment and subsequent single-mother 'disconnection' before and after the Welfare Reform and Great Recession.

Michael S Rendall1, Rachel M Shattuck2.   

Abstract

We analyze data from two nationally-representative U.S. surveys that include cohorts of young women before and after the 1996 Welfare Reform. Women were more likely to have their first birth precede their first stable employment after than before the reform. Women with this life-course sequence were at higher risk of single motherhood and, as single mothers, were at higher risk of 'disconnection' simultaneously from earned income and public cash benefits. Declines in employment in the Great-Recession period resulted in 'disconnection' for between a fifth and a quarter of single mothers who did not experience stable employment before their first birth.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Children in Poverty; Families in Poverty; Welfare Reform

Year:  2018        PMID: 31057320      PMCID: PMC6497088          DOI: 10.1080/10875549.2018.1550132

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Poverty        ISSN: 1087-5549


  4 in total

1.  On a new schedule: transitions to adulthood and family change.

Authors:  Frank F Furstenberg
Journal:  Future Child       Date:  2010

2.  Women's Short-Term Employment Trajectories Following Birth: Patterns, Determinants, and Variations by Race/Ethnicity and Nativity.

Authors:  Yao Lu; Julia Shu-Huah Wang; Wen-Jui Han
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2017-02

3.  Births: Final Data for 2016.

Authors:  Joyce A Martin; Brady E Hamilton; Michelle J K Osterman; Anne K Driscoll; Patrick Drake
Journal:  Natl Vital Stat Rep       Date:  2018-01

4.  Multiple Imputation For Combined-Survey Estimation With Incomplete Regressors In One But Not Both Surveys.

Authors:  Michael S Rendall; Bonnie Ghosh-Dastidar; Margaret M Weden; Elizabeth H Baker; Zafar Nazarov
Journal:  Sociol Methods Res       Date:  2013-11-01
  4 in total

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