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The Differential Impact of Universal Child Benefits on the Labour Supply of Married and Single Mothers

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The Differential Impact of Universal Child Benefits on the Labour Supply of Married and Single Mothers
Abstract
We examine the effects of the Universal Child Care Benefit on the labour supply of mothers. The benefit has a significant negative effect on the labour supply of legally married mothers, reducing their likelihood of participation in the labour force by 1.4 percentage points and hours worked by nearly one hour per week. In contrast, the likelihood of participation by divorced mothers rises by 2.8 percentage points when receiving the benefit and does not affect hours worked. Moreover, the benefit does not have a statistically significant effect on the participation of common-law married mothers or never-married mothers.
Publication
Canadian Public Policy
Volume
42
Issue
1
Pages
49-64
Date
2016
Language
en
ISSN
1911-9917
Accessed
8/1/18, 1:38 AM
Library Catalog
Project MUSE
Citation
Koebel, K., & Schirle, T. (2016). The Differential Impact of Universal Child Benefits on the Labour Supply of Married and Single Mothers. Canadian Public Policy, 42(1), 49–64. http://lcerpa.org/public/papers/LCERPA_2015_11.pdf