The Impact of Child Care Subsidies on Child Well-Being: Evidence from Geographic Variation in the Distance to Social Service Agencies
Published By: IZA on eSS | Published Date: July, 05 , 2010In recent years, child care subsidies have become an integral part of federal and state efforts
to move economically disadvantaged parents from welfare to work. Although previous
empirical studies consistently show that these employment-related subsidies raise work
levels among this group, little is known about the impact of subsidy receipt on child wellbeing.
In this paper, we identify the causal effect of child care subsidies on child development
by exploiting geographic variation in the distance that families must travel from home in order
to reach the nearest social service agency that administers the subsidy application process.
Using data from the Kindergarten cohort of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, our
instrumental variables estimates suggest that children receiving subsidized care in the year
before kindergarten score lower on tests of cognitive ability and reveal more behavior
problems throughout kindergarten. However, these negative effects largely disappear by the
time children reach the end of third grade. Our results point to an unintended consequence of
a child care subsidy regime that conditions eligibility on parental employment and
deemphasizes child care quality. [IZA DP No. 5102]
Author(s): Chris M. Herbst, Erdal Tekin | Posted on: Aug 05, 2010 | Views(1418) | Download (689)