TY - JOUR AU - Kaestner,Robert AU - O'Neill,June TI - Has Welfare Reform Changed Teenage Behaviors? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 8932 PY - 2002 Y2 - May 2002 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8932 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w8932.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Robert Kaestner Institute of Government and Public Affairs University of Illinois 815 West Van Buren Street, Suite 525 Chicago, IL 60607 Tel: 312/996-8227 E-Mail: kaestner.robert@gmail.com June E. O'Neill 420 Riverside Drive New York, NY 10025 Tel: 212-662-1784 E-Mail: june.oneill@baruch.cuny.edu AB - We use data from the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth 1979 and 1997 cohorts to compare welfare use, fertility rates, educational attainment, and marriage rates among teenage women in the years before and the years immediately following welfare reform. Our first objective is to document differences between these cohorts in welfare use and outcomes and behaviors correlated with 'entry' into welfare, and with future economic and social well-being. Our second objective is to investigate the causal role of welfare reform in behavioral change. We find significant differences between cohorts in welfare use and in outcomes related to welfare use. Further, difference-in-differences estimates suggest that welfare reform has been associated with reduced welfare receipt, reduced fertility, reduced marriage, and lower school drop-out among young women who, because of a disadvantaged family background, are at high risk of welfare receipt (relative to those at lower risk). Finally, in the post-welfare reform era, teenage mothers are less likely to receive welfare and are more likely to live with a spouse or to live with at least one parent than in the pre-reform era. Establishing definitively that welfare reform is responsible for these changes among teenagers will require further investigation. ER -