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Cattan, Peter – Monthly Labor Review, 1991
Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth show that the lack of affordable, reliable child care was the reason an estimated 1.1 million young mothers did not seek or hold a job in 1986. One-third of those mothers not in the labor force because of child care problems also lacked high school diplomas. (SK)
Descriptors: Costs, Day Care, Employment Patterns, Employment Problems
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Veum, Jonathan R.; Gleason, Philip M. – Monthly Labor Review, 1991
Data from the National Longitudinal Survey show that most employed mothers rely on relatives for child care, particularly low-income mothers. Weekly expenditures averaged $45 for older mothers to $60 for younger mothers. Lower-income women were more likely to have gaps in employment because of child care problems. (SK)
Descriptors: Costs, Day Care, Employed Women, Employment Problems
Bernhardt, Annette; Morris, Martina; Handcock, Mark; Scott, Marc – 1998
To examine the impact of rising wage inequality on lifetime wage growth, a study compared the wage mobility experienced by two cohorts of young white men from the National Longitudinal Surveys. The original cohort entered the labor market in the mid-1960s at the end of the economic boom and was followed through the end of the 1970s. The recent…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Comparative Analysis, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns
Ruhm, Christopher J. – 1994
The long-term effects of employment during high school were analyzed by using National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data on 1,067 students who were initially interviewed in 1979 and who remained in the survey sample through 1991. Hours worked by respondents during the week prior to the survey date in their sophomore, junior, and senior years of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Comparative Analysis, Economic Status, Education Work Relationship