Fragile families in the American welfare state
Fragile families in the American welfare state
The proportion of children born out of wedlock is now over 40%. At birth, about half of these parents are co-habiting. This paper examines data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study (N = 4271) to describe for the first time the role of welfare state benefits in the economic lives of married, cohabiting, and single parent families with young children. Surprisingly, total welfare state benefits received by the three family types are relatively similar. Nearly half of the full incomes of fragile families come from welfare state transfers. For single parent families the proportion is slightly more than two thirds. Though aggregate welfare state transfers are approximately equal across family type and thus change very little as marital status changes, these transfers and the taxes required to finance them cushion family status changes and substantially narrow the gap in full income between married and fragile families.
210-221
Garfinkel, Irwin
8081939e-938a-4a83-96a5-bd5633037d85
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
1 August 2015
Garfinkel, Irwin
8081939e-938a-4a83-96a5-bd5633037d85
Zilanawala, Afshin
dddbeee8-798a-441c-bb79-f0d3908647dd
Abstract
The proportion of children born out of wedlock is now over 40%. At birth, about half of these parents are co-habiting. This paper examines data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing study (N = 4271) to describe for the first time the role of welfare state benefits in the economic lives of married, cohabiting, and single parent families with young children. Surprisingly, total welfare state benefits received by the three family types are relatively similar. Nearly half of the full incomes of fragile families come from welfare state transfers. For single parent families the proportion is slightly more than two thirds. Though aggregate welfare state transfers are approximately equal across family type and thus change very little as marital status changes, these transfers and the taxes required to finance them cushion family status changes and substantially narrow the gap in full income between married and fragile families.
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Accepted/In Press date: 20 May 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 June 2015
Published date: 1 August 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 451301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451301
ISSN: 0190-7409
PURE UUID: d84e01dc-57b2-408b-97ef-8b9fedbc2b29
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Date deposited: 20 Sep 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07
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Author:
Irwin Garfinkel
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