The Impact of Placing Adolescent Males into Foster Care on Education, Income Assistance, and Convictions
William P. Warburton,
Rebecca N. Warburton,
Arthur Sweetman and
Clyde Hertzman
Canadian Journal of Economics, 2014, vol. 47, issue 1, 35-69
Abstract:
Understanding the causal impacts of taking atrisk youth into government care is part of the evidence base for policy. Two sources of exogenous variation affecting alternative subsets of the atrisk population provide causal impacts interpreted as local average treatment effects. Placing 16 to18yearold males into care decreases or delays high school graduation, increases income assistance receipt, and has alternative effects on criminal convictions depending upon the instrument employed. This suggests that asking whether more or fewer children should be taken into care is insufficient; it also matters which, and how, children are taken into care.
JEL-codes: I13 J13 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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