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Article
The Medicaid Notch, Labor Supply and Welfare Participation: Evidence From Eligibility Expansions
The Quarterly Journal of Economics (1995)
  • Aaron Yelowitz, University of Kentucky
Abstract

I assess the impact of losing public health insurance on labor market decisions of women by examining a series of Medicaid eligibility expansions targeted toward young children. These targeted expansions severed the historical tie between AFDC and Medicaid eligibility. The reforms allowed a mother's earnings to increase without losing public health insurance for her young children. Increasing the income limit for Medicaid resulted in a decrease in AFDC participation and an increase in labor force participation among these women. The effects were large for ever married women, and negligible for never married women.

Publication Date
November, 1995
Citation Information
Aaron Yelowitz. "The Medicaid Notch, Labor Supply and Welfare Participation: Evidence From Eligibility Expansions" The Quarterly Journal of Economics Vol. 110 Iss. 4 (1995)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/yelowitz/3/