Income Sources Across Childhood in Families With Nonresident Fathers

Author:

Fomby Paula1ORCID,Harvey Hope2ORCID,Musick Kelly3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA

2. Martin School of Public Policy and Administration, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA

3. Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA

Abstract

Abstract Unpartnered mothers rely on formal and informal income sources to support their coresident minor children. Building on work focusing on selective populations and shorter time horizons, we describe the family income sources on which U.S. women and their minor children rely for up to 17 years following an unpartnered birth or union dissolution (Panel Study of Income Dynamics 2001–2017; N = 12,369 person-year records from 3,148 children). Using rich description and fixed-effect models, we treat family income as dynamic, mapping change in the share and amount of family income from multiple sources as children age and women gain employment experience; enter new unions; experience changes in eligibility for public support programs; and receive contributions from kin, friends, and other household members. A patchwork of income sources is the norm throughout childhood, with mothers' earnings nearly universal but insufficient as a sole source of family income. Maternal repartnering increases family income through new partner earnings but is accompanied by offsetting reductions in other income sources, particularly from outside the household. In the context of weak institutional support for U.S. families, families with nonresident fathers rely on a complex mix of income sources to make ends meet.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference69 articles.

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