wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/047d8a247c13b538517f5c6bfcdeff90-brayfield-a-and-hof/info.yaml

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abstract: "Objective. The cost of child care affects women's economic\nopportunities,\
\ limits children's chances to experience high-quality\nenvironments in their early\
\ childhood years, and reinforces economic and\nsocial inequality. This paper examines\
\ several factors that may\ninfluence whether employed mothers purchase child care,\
\ and, among those\nwho pay, how much they pay for child care services. It also\n\
investigates how these factors may be associated with the proportion of\ntotal family\
\ income and the proportion of the mother's earnings spent on\nchild care. Methods.\
\ Whereas past research has relied primarily on\ncross-tabular techniques, this\
\ study uses logistic and OLS regressions\nto analyze data from the National Child\
\ Care Survey 1990. Results. \nFindings suggest that cultural, economic, and kinship\
\ resources and the\nneed for child care are most important in determining whether\
\ an\nemployed mother pays for child care. Family resources, cost of living,\n\
and availability of alternative providers, such as teenage children, are\nsignificant\
\ predictors of how much employed mothers pay for child care. \nConclusions. It\
\ is recommended that policies should emphasize voucher\nprograms over reimbursement\
\ for out-of-pocket expenditures."
affiliation: BRAYFIELD, A (Corresponding Author), TULANE UNIV,DEPT SOCIOL,220 NEWCOMB
HALL,NEW ORLEANS,LA 70118, USA.
author: BRAYFIELD, A and HOFFERTH, SL
author_list:
- family: BRAYFIELD
given: A
- family: HOFFERTH
given: SL
da: '2023-09-28'
files: []
issn: 0038-4941
journal: SOCIAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY
keywords-plus: WORK; EMPLOYMENT
language: English
month: MAR
number: '1'
number-of-cited-references: '17'
pages: 158-177
papis_id: 0f72e7427d554f755ecdcb57692ebc15
ref: Brayfield1995balancingfamily
times-cited: '14'
title: BALANCING THE FAMILY BUDGET - DIFFERENCES IN CHILD-CARE EXPENDITURES BY RACE
ETHNICITY, ECONOMIC-STATUS, AND FAMILY-STRUCTURE
type: article
unique-id: WOS:A1995RC27600011
usage-count-last-180-days: '0'
usage-count-since-2013: '4'
volume: '76'
web-of-science-categories: Political Science; Sociology
year: '1995'