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The Effect of Welfare Reform on Childbirth, Marriage, and Divorce

This dissertation contains two essays on the effect of welfare reform on child-
birth, marriage, and divorce. In the first essay, I exploit the cross state variation in
welfare reform implementation to identify its effect on birth rates. The results from
multinomial logit models suggest that the welfare reform significantly increased the
probability of marital births. The out-of-wedlock birth rates decreased but this effect
is not significant. The strong work incentives decrease birth rates in both marital
and non-marital statuses suggesting that bearing a child is not appealing for women
who are more progressive in careers. However, the most aggressive welfare policy
significantly increases marital birth as expected. Birth rates among teenage girls are
not affected by the welfare reform. I further investigate the effect of the family cap
policy. Using a semi-natural experiment, I compare the birth rate of women who
already have had a second or higher order birth (treatment group) to women who
have had one child (comparison group), in states with and without family caps. The
difference in difference estimates reveal a strictly negative effect of family caps on the
higher order birth rates as expected.
In the second essay, I use reduced-form estimation and cross-state variation in
timing of reform adoption to extract both mechanical and behavioral effects of welfare
reform on marriage and divorce likelihood. I construct a flow measure of marriage and
divorce by matching individuals in the Current Population Survey from March 1988B
to 2002 and observing changes in marital status. I introduce a converse matching procedure to detect women who are not in the survey for two consecutive years. I
find that the welfare reform has a significantly negative effect on marriage rates and
an insignificant effect on divorce rates. The Difference-in-Difference estimates suggest that marriage among disadvantaged women is negatively affected by the welfare
reform. I also provide a theoretical model to decompose the effect of welfare reform
on marriage due to each of the components of the reform, i.e., time limits, work sanctions, earnings disregards, and maximum cash benefits. My results provide a novel
explanation for the effects of work incentives and welfare restrictions on marriage.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-08-3273
Date2009 August 1900
CreatorsPakdeethai, Pimrak
ContributorsUreta, Manuelita
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatapplication/pdf

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