Publication | Closed Access
Barriers to the Employment of Welfare Recipients
402
Citations
30
References
1999
Year
Public WelfareIncome JusticeSocial Work PolicyWelfare RecipientsSocial WorkWelfare EconomicsHuman WelfareUrban Michigan CountyHealth SciencesSocial InequalityPublic PolicyEmploymentDisadvantaged BackgroundExpanded Regression ModelWelfare StateSingle MothersWelfare PolicyPopulation InequalitySociologyBusinessSocial PolicyUnemployment
The study investigates how specific employment barriers constrain the employability of single‑mother welfare recipients in an urban Michigan county. The authors surveyed a representative sample of single‑mother welfare recipients in that county to assess barriers to employment. They found that these mothers face high levels of physical and mental health problems, domestic violence, and transportation barriers, low levels of substance abuse and work‑norm misunderstandings, that multiple barriers are common and negatively associated with employment, and that a regression model including these barriers predicts employment better than one using only traditional variables.
Using a new survey of a representative sample of single mothers who were welfare recipients in an urban Michigan county, the authors explore how certain employment barriers, often ignored by previous welfare researchers and policy makers, constrain these single mothers' employability. The results the authors present show that welfare recipients in the sample have unusually high levels of some barriers to work, such as physical and mental health problems, domestic violence, and lack of transportation, but relatively low levels of other barriers, such as drug or alcohol dependence and lack of understanding work norms. The authors also show that most recipients have multiple barriers and that the number of barriers is strongly and negatively associated with employment status. In addition, the authors find that an expanded regression model that includes these barriers is a significantly better predictor of employment than is a model that only includes variables traditionally measured, such as education, work experience and welfare history. The authors conclude with a discussion of the implications of these results for understanding the employment and post-welfare experiences of single mothers and for reforming welfare-to-work policies.
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