Litcius/Paper detail

Exploring the experiences and dynamics of an unconditional cash transfer for low-income mothers: A mixed-methods study

Natalia M. Rojas, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Lisa A. Gennetian, Mayra Lemus Rangel, Samantha A. Melvin, Kimberly G. Noble, Greg J. Duncan, Katherine Magunson

2020Journal of Children and Poverty26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Little is understood about how an unconditional cash transfer might operate and affect behavior among low-income parents of infants in the United States. We investigate these questions using data from a random-assignment pilot study (N = 30) in which unconditional cash transfers were distributed monthly on debit cards to two groups of low-income parents in New York City during the first 12 months of their newborns’ lives. Mothers were randomized to receive either $100 per month or $20 per month. Mothers distinguished spending the cash transfer on essentials vs. extras, such as going out to dinner with family. The monthly cash transfer “tided them over,” even at the lower amount of $20, especially when income from other sources ran short at the end of the month. Some mothers reported saving money for unexpected expenses.

Topics & Concepts

CashTransfer (computing)Affect (linguistics)Low incomeCash transfersDemographic economicsRandomized experimentEconomicsTest (biology)BusinessPsychologyFinanceStatisticsComputer scienceMathematicsBiologyPaleontologyCommunicationParallel computingMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and PostpartumGender, Labor, and Family DynamicsEarly Childhood Education and Development
Exploring the experiences and dynamics of an unconditional cash transfer for low-income mothers: A mixed-methods study | Litcius