|
Working
Paper Series:
05.01
The Material Well-Being of Single Mother Households in the 1980's and 1990's: What Can We Learn From Food Spending?
Thomas DeLeire and Helen Levy
Abstract:
A combination of welfare reform, expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit, and other policy
changes led to increases in the labor supply of single mothers in the 1990s and a decline in their
participation in cash welfare programs. Whether the material well-being of single mothers and
their families has improved is less clear. Meyer and Sullivan (2004) report that single mothers’
food expenditure increased during the 1990s and conclude that their well-being either improved
or remained the same, relative to single childless women or married women with children. Our
reading of the data suggests that a more cautious interpretation is in order. In particular, we note
that increases in food spending do not necessarily reflect increases in well-being. Total food
spending may change even though the actual food consumed did not if there is a shift from
home-prepared food to commercially-prepared or restaurant food. We examine trends in
spending on food at home and food away from home using data from the Consumer Expenditure
Diary Survey and find that they are consistent with such a shift. We find that the entire increase
in food expenditure can be explained by a shift from food at home to food away from home.
The complete
document may be downloaded or viewed using Adobe
Acrobat Reader. If you do not have Adobe Acrobat
Reader, you can download
it from Adobe.
|