Earnings Supplements and Job Quality among Former Welfare Recipients
Resource type
            
        Authors/contributors
                    - Foley, Kelly (Author)
 - Schwartz, Saul (Author)
 
Title
            Earnings Supplements and Job Quality among Former Welfare Recipients
        Abstract
            The Self-Sufficiency Project (SSP) offered a generous but time-limited earnings supplement to a randomly assigned group of lone parents—who were also long-term social assistance recipients—if they found full-time work and left social assistance. Employment data was collected for this group over a three-year period following the offer, and for a randomly-assigned control group. This article analyzes the characteristics of the first job that SSP participants found after they left social assistance. The occupations and industries of the first job held are analyzed as is SSP's impact on hourly wages, weekly hours and job stability. The article finds that SSP increased employment in jobs that were no worse (and no better) than the jobs that participants might have taken in the absence of the program.
        Publication
            Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations
        Volume
            58
        Issue
            2
        Pages
            258-286
        Date
            Spring 2003
        Journal Abbr
            Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            0034379X
        Accessed
            5/2/15, 4:33 AM
        Citation
            Foley, K., & Schwartz, S. (2003). Earnings Supplements and Job Quality among Former Welfare Recipients. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 58(2), 258–286. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/2003/v58/n2/index.html
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