大衰退之前和期间低收入产后家庭收入和安全网模式的种族差异

IF 1 Q3 SOCIAL WORK Poverty & Public Policy Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1002/pop4.396
Dylan J. F. Bellisle, Marci Ybarra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在没有带薪家事假的情况下,产后低收入未婚女性往往依赖于工资收入、公共安全网计划和非正式家庭支持等各种资源。经济大衰退(2007-2009 年)造成大量失业,黑人和拉丁裔家庭受到的经济影响尤为严重。公共安全网的规定减轻了经济困难,但目前还不清楚产后低收入妇女是否在经济衰退期间凑齐了类似的资源,也不清楚妇女在获得资源方面是否存在种族差异。我们利用收入和公共项目调查中 2004 年至 2011 年间生育的低收入未婚女性样本,通过研究经济衰退前和衰退期间不同种族群体产后低收入未婚女性的收入模式和安全网(SNAP、WIC 和 TANF)使用情况,考察了安全网规定和家庭支持是否减轻了大衰退的影响。我们的研究结果表明,大衰退对黑人产后妇女的经济福利产生了不同程度的负面影响,尤其是通过降低工资收入。SNAP 收入的增加可能减轻了经济衰退对黑人妇女的部分(但不是全部)有害影响,而 WIC 参与率的提高也可能为解决黑人妇女的粮食不安全问题提供了重要支持。本文讨论了对母婴健康和政策的影响。
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Ethnoracial differences in income and safety net patterns among low‐income postpartum families before and during the Great Recession
In the absence of paid family leave, postpartum low‐income unmarried women often rely on a patchwork of resources from wage earnings, public safety‐net programs, and informal familial support. The Great Recession (2007–2009) caused massive unemployment, with Black and Latine families disproportionately impacted by the economic fallout. Public safety‐net provisions attenuated economic hardship, yet it's unclear if postpartum low‐income women patched together comparable resources during the recession and if there were racially disparities in women's access to resources. Using a sample of low‐income unmarried women who gave birth between 2004 and 2011 from the Survey of Income and Public Program, we examine whether safety‐net provisions and familial support attenuated the fallout of the Great Recession by examining income patterns and safety‐net use (SNAP, WIC, and TANF) among postpartum low‐income unmarried women by ethnoracial group before and during the recession. Our findings suggest the Great Recession had a disparate negative impact on the economic well‐being of postpartum Black women, particularly through lower wage earnings. Increased SNAP income may have attenuated some, but not all, of the deleterious impact of the recession on Black women, and increased WIC participation may also have provided crucial support for addressing food insecurity among Black women. Implications for maternal and infant health and policy are discussed.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Poverty is worldwide, but empirical studies of poverty, income distribution, and low-income aid programs for citizens have thus far been more common in America, Canada, Australia, and the major industrial nations of Europe. American and Canadian studies of poverty, income issues, and social welfare programs have, to an extent, been insular in scope. Poverty & Public Policy (PPP) is a global journal. In much of the world, including Central and South America, Africa, the Middle East and much of Asia, there are important studies of poverty, income and aid programs; little has been integrated into the scholarly literature, however, which is an oversight this journal aims to correct. Poverty & Public Policy publishes quality research on poverty, income distribution, and welfare programs from scholars around the globe. PPP is eclectic, publishing peer-reviewed empirical studies, peer-reviewed theoretical essays on approaches to poverty and social welfare, book reviews, data sets, edited blogs, and incipient data from scholars, aid workers and other hands-on officials in less developed nations and nations that are just beginning to focus on these problems in a scientific fashion.
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