Andrea L. Ziegert is Julian H. Robertson, Jr. professor of economics at Denison University. Dennis Sullivan is emeritus professor of economics at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
What will it take to increase the well-being of children from poor families in the United States? Ziegert and Sullivan analyze data from the 1995-2020 March Supplement to the Current Population Survey and Columbia University's Supplemental Poverty Measure project, the latter reflecting an alternative measure of poverty developed by the US Census Bureau and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The authors then report on the simulated impact of various contemporary policy ideas on poverty, including job guarantees, improved social support through the earned income tax credit, and subsidized childcare and medical expenses. The authors also consider the costs of these policies. The writing is clear and the tables are informative. Despite its short length, the book is densely packed with facts and essential reading for those invested in these issues.Highly recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals. Work alone is never enough to significantly reduce child poverty, but packages of work-support benefits and family-support benefits can help us do much better in reducing child poverty in America. Ziegert and Sullivan tell us in clear language how to bundle these polices to achieve policy goals which support workers and which reduce child poverty.