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Barth, Michael C.; Greenberg, David H. – Journal of Human Resources, 1971
The work disincentive effects of a negative income tax and wage subsidy, and a mixed wage subsidy-public assistance program are compared. (BH)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Economically Disadvantaged, Guaranteed Income, Motivation

Galligan, Richard J.; Bahr, Stephen J. – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1978
Examined effects of economic well-being on marital stability using longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Labor Market Experience, 1,349 married females interviewed annually over a five year period. Data indicated that income by itself had little effect on marital dissolution. (Author)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Family Income, Guaranteed Income, Interpersonal Relationship

Hoshino, George – Social Work, 1971
This paper examines the American experience of combining aid and services in public assistance, the parallel British experience, and some aspects of professional practice in order to highlight the implications of the money and morality issue for social welfare policy and social work practice. (Author)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Economic Factors, Guaranteed Income, Income
Greenberg, David H.; Kosters, Marvin – 1970
An empirical analysis of the effects of alternative income maintenance programs, The Survey of Economic Opportunity, was used to obtain estimates of the labor supply parameters required to assess the implications of these programs for hours of work of male family heads. Labor supply response to changes in the family heads' net wages and in family…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Economically Disadvantaged, Employment Patterns, Guaranteed Income

Lucy, William – Urban League Review, 1986
Labor supports full employment as a goal of national policy because workers' security is connected to the general health of the economy and the society. To lay the groundwork for achieving that goal, the following are discussed: (1) causes of unemployment; and (2) the mechanism for achieving full employment. (PS)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment, Employment Opportunities, Guaranteed Income

Weiss, Yoram; And Others – Journal of Human Resources, 1980
A study investigated the impact of a negative income tax and a program of schooling subsidies on the demand for schooling of adult heads of families. Strong effects of the schooling subsidies were found, but net effects of the negative income tax on schooling were not significant. (LRA)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Adults, Attendance
Gordon, Edmund W., Ed. – 1969
"Strategies for Closing the Poverty Gap" by Gertrude Goldberg and Carol Lopate, which makes up the contents of this issue of the IRCD Bulletin, critically reviews income maintenance schemes, social insurance and public assistance programs, family allowances, the negative income tax, and full employment proposals. Of these plans to end poverty the…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment, Financial Support, Guaranteed Income

Seck, Essie Tramel – Urban League Review, 1986
Conditions for most black families are getting worse both absolutely as well as relative to whites. The following aspects of this situation are discussed: (1) economic determinants, especially unemployment; and (2) changes in family structure as a means of strengthening black families. (PS)
Descriptors: Black Family, Economic Factors, Employment Opportunities, Family Characteristics

Hall, Arden R. – Journal of Human Resources, 1980
A study to determine the effects of free counseling services and a program of subsidies for the direct costs of education and training revealed that the subsidies did induce increased school attendance, and both counseling and training affected labor supply. However, no subsequent effects of increased human capital have been found. (LRA)
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Adults, Attendance
Smith, James P. – 1973
The standard one-period labor supply model that economists have used is in some ways an inadequate tool to evaluate a Family Assistance Plan (FAP). The principal difficulty is that an FAP will have important interperiod or life cycle effects. The pure life cycle model, an extension of the work of Becker and Ghez, is derived here without reference…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Economic Factors, Economic Research, Family Financial Resources
DeTray, Dennis N. – 1973
An analysis of the potential effects of different types of welfare reforms can proceed in one of two ways. One can explore the effects of a given plan in detail, or one can cull from the set of feasible alternative plans the major changes that these plans will bring about and then analyze the effect of these changes in a general framework. At…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Economic Research, Employment Patterns, Family Attitudes
Shifron, Gad – 1974
This paper examined the case for public subsidization of child care services from the point of view of an economics theory. It was suggested that public subsidization could be justified either as a way to correct a distortion in resource allocation or as a way to change inappropriate income distribution. The allocative argument consisted of three…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Economic Change
Palmer, John L. – 1988
After progress towards achieving major income security goals during the 1960s and 1970s, economic slowdown and public reaction against "the welfare state" have curtailed direct intervention by the federal government for these purposes. Absolute poverty and welfare dependency have increased in the 1980s, especially among the young. Major…
Descriptors: Access to Health Care, Age Differences, Economic Factors, Economically Disadvantaged