Five Thousand American Families: Patterns of Economic Progress, Volume 3James N. Morgan, Greg J. Duncan Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, 1974 |
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Page 142
... married couple were 25.8 percentage points more likely to use food stamps than households headed by a middle - aged ... couples were 12.8 percent less likely than middle - aged married couples to cite administrative hassles or physical ...
... married couple were 25.8 percentage points more likely to use food stamps than households headed by a middle - aged ... couples were 12.8 percent less likely than middle - aged married couples to cite administrative hassles or physical ...
Page 144
... Married Couple row . A Some additional interpretational comments are in order . negative sign before an entry in the ... couples are presented in the first row of Table 4.6 . For the remaining variables , only the results that were ...
... Married Couple row . A Some additional interpretational comments are in order . negative sign before an entry in the ... couples are presented in the first row of Table 4.6 . For the remaining variables , only the results that were ...
Page 145
... married couples about the program in general , they were more likely to believe that they were ineligible for both financial and nonfinancial reasons . The net effect of these informational factors was to account for approximately 60 ...
... married couples about the program in general , they were more likely to believe that they were ineligible for both financial and nonfinancial reasons . The net effect of these informational factors was to account for approximately 60 ...
Table des matières
EFFECTS OF INFLATION ON ATTITUDES | 60 |
PARTICIPATION IN THE SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY | 93 |
PARTICIPATION IN THE FOOD STAMP | 121 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Publications, Volume 229 University of Michigan. Institute for Social Research Affichage d'extraits - 1986 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
adjusted AFDC analysis Ann Arbor annual earnings assets black children black women bonus value coefficients cross-sectional dependent variable depreciation divorced earnings change economic status effects efficacy change elderly eligible households estimated experience factors female Five Thousand American food stamp program full-time GINI coefficient he/she head and wife hourly earnings household heads human capital Income Dynamics income/needs increase individual ineligible Institute for Social James N labor market labor supply less longitudinal male married couple measures Mincer Morgan mother-only households mothers natural gas natural logarithm nonblack children number of children Number of Observations occupation Panel Study parents part-time participation rate patterns percent period person Polachek poverty PSID regression relative reported sample selection bias sex segregation significant Social Research Standard errors Study of Income Supplemental Security Income Table transfers trend two-parent unemployment unmarried variables wage change wage growth weeks welfare white women wife/friend