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Publication Date:
July 2007
ISSN:
1935-1682
DOI:
10.2202/1935-1682.1682

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Ed. by Auriol , Emmanuelle / Brunner, Johann / Fleck, Robert / Friebel, Guido / Ludwig, Sandra / Requate, Till / Schneider, Hilmar / Tsui, Kevin / Wichardt, Philipp

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Family Expenditures on Child Care

Dan T Rosenbaum1 / Christopher J Ruhm2

1University of North Carolina, Greensboro, dan.t.rosenbaum@gmail.com

2University of North Carolina, Greensboro, ruhm@virginia.edu

Citation Information: The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy. Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages –, ISSN (Online) 1935-1682, DOI: 10.2202/1935-1682.1682, July 2007

Publication History:
Published Online:
2007-07-16

Abstract

This study examines the child care "expenditure share," defined as child care expenses divided by after-tax income. We estimate that the average child under six years of age lives in a family that spends 4.9 percent of after-tax income on child care. However, this conceals wide variation: 63 percent of such children reside in families with no child care expenses and 10 percent are in families where the expenditure share exceeds 16 percent. The proportion of income devoted to child care is typically greater in single-parent than married-couple families but is not systematically related to a constructed measure of socioeconomic status. One reason for this is that disadvantaged families use lower cost modes and pay less per hour for given types of care. The expenditure share would be much less equal without low cost (presumably subsidized) formal care focused on needy families, as well as government tax and transfer policies that redistribute income towards them.

Keywords: child care; expenditure share; parental employment; work-family balance

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