Immigrant and native responses to welfare reform |
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Authors: | Robert Kaestner Neeraj Kaushal |
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Institution: | (1) Institute of Government and Public Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60607, USA;(2) School of Social Work, Columbia University, New York, NY 10025, USA |
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Abstract: | We investigate the effect of welfare reform in the US on the employment and hours of work of low-educated foreign-born and native-born women. For foreign-born women, we investigate whether the effect of welfare reform differed by year of immigration. We also examine whether the immigrant provisions of welfare reform had a chilling effect on those who remained eligible for benefits. Results suggest that welfare reform induced low-educated women to increase their labor market attachment; reform had larger effects on the least educated native-born women and among foreign-born, larger effects on more recent arrivals. The chilling hypothesis is not supported.All correspondence to Robert Kaestner. The authors thank Lynn Karoly, Christoph Schmidt, seminar participants at the University of Illinois and New School University, and several anonymous referees for comments on a previous draft of this paper. Robert Kaestner is grateful to the Luce Foundation for partial support for this research. Responsible editor: Christoph M. Schmidt. |
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Keywords: | J21 I38 |
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