The Effects of Welfare and Child Support Policies on the Timing and Incidence of Marriage Following a Nonmarital Birth
Jean Knab,
Irv Garfinkel,
Sara McLanahan,
Emily Moiduddin and
Cynthia Osborne
Additional contact information
Jean Knab: Princeton University
Irv Garfinkel: Columbia University
Sara McLanahan: Princeton University
Emily Moiduddin: Princeton University
Cynthia Osborne: University of Texas, Austin
No 898, Working Papers from Princeton University, School of Public and International Affairs, Center for Research on Child Wellbeing.
Abstract:
Researchers and policy makers have long been concerned that government policies may influence individual behavior in unintended ways. In particular, they worry that by providing mothers with an income that is independent of marriage, welfare and child support policies may discourage marriage and increase union dissolution. Economic theory is clear with respect to the marriage disincentives of welfare for single mothers (Becker 1981), but it is ambiguous with respect to child support. Whereas stronger enforcement reduces the costs of single motherhood for women, making marriage less attractive, it increases the costs for fathers, making marriage more attractive. Which effect dominates is an empirical question. Although empirical studies vary with respect to effect size and methods, the evidence compiled during the 1980s and early 1990s indicates that welfare generosity during this period had a small negative effect on marriage among mothers (Moffitt 1998) whereas strong child support enforcement reduced single motherhood by reducing nonmarital childbearing.
Date: 2008-09
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