Although billions of dollars are spent each year on child care subsidies to help low-income,
working families, researchers are only beginning to understand whether and how child care subsidies
influence employment. Recent research, funded by the Child Care Bureau and conducted by the
principal investigators in this study, has demonstrated that the child care subsidy (CCS) plays an
important role in supporting family self-sufficiency by increasing employment duration among
current and former Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) recipients.
The project proposes to
extend this work by analyzing subsidy use, and employment and welfare outcomes among all
low-income families in Illinois, Maryland, and Texas—not just those with TANF histories. The
primary questions are how employment and welfare outcomes differ between those who use
child care subsidies and those who do not, and how these outcomes differ for different groups of
low-income families. The researchers will also use the fact that child care subsidy policies vary by state to
explore how outcomes vary by policies and practices, thereby advancing our understanding of
the contexts that promote family well-being. By collaborating with the U.S. Census Bureau and
using individual-level census records, the researchers will be able to overcome past data restrictions that have
impeded study of the entire low-income population in a state.
The project will result in
a more comprehensive model of CCS use that will allow policymakers to better estimate CCS
need and to understand the relation between take-up and outcomes. The researchers will share the model and
benchmarks with interested states at a roundtable discussion hosted by Child Care and Early
Education Research Connections. |