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Who benefits from Child Benefit?

Who benefits from Child Benefit?. Laura Blow Ian Walker Yu Zhu. Background. 1975, Barbara Castle, Secretary of State for Social Services, on the Child Benefit Bill:

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Who benefits from Child Benefit?

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  1. Who benefits from Child Benefit? Laura Blow Ian Walker Yu Zhu

  2. Background • 1975, Barbara Castle, Secretary of State for Social Services, on the Child Benefit Bill: • “… the nation's provision for family support is concentrated first and foremost where it is needed most on the poorest families; and that it goes to the person responsible for caring for the children and managing the budget for their food, clothing and other necessities.”

  3. Background • Gordon Brown, March 1998 Budget: • “Child Benefit remains the fairest, the most efficient and the most cost-effective way of recognising the extra costs and responsibilities borne by all parents”. • April 2005 Budget: • CB increased to £17.00 a week for the first child (£17.55 for lone parents), and to £11.40 a week for subsequent children. “Since 1997, the value of Child Benefit for the first child has been increased by 25 per cent in real terms”.

  4. Our aim • To learn something about the effectiveness of transfers aimed at children in the UK. • Previous literature suggests that such labelling can have an effect - Kooreman (2000) finds evidence that CB is spent disproportionately on child related goods in Netherlands.

  5. Our aim • To infer how CB is spent • i.e. is it spent on child related goods (more than are other sources of income)? • or is it spent on adult related goods? • or is “a pound a pound”? • So a direct approach to whether “money matters”.

  6. Empirical approach • CB is • universally paid • up rated (roughly) yearly – sometimes in line with prices, sometimes more or less than this • Therefore get monthly exogenous real variation from • inflationary erosion between up ratings • real increases/decreases when updated

  7. Real CB 1979-2001 (£ per week in 2003 prices)

  8. Empirical approach • CB is • universally paid • up rated (roughly) yearly – sometimes in line with prices, sometimes more or less than this • Therefore get monthly exogenous real variation from • inflationary erosion between up ratings • real increases/decreases when updated • Can think of our approach as treating CB variation as “natural experiment”.

  9. Empirical approach • Use UK FES data from 1980 to 2000 to estimate Engel curves for different goods • Child specific goods: children’s clothing • Adult specific goods: men and women’s clothing, alcohol, tobacco. • Include CB and other expenditure (othexp) separately. • Test whether MPC(CB)=MPC(othexp) for the different goods. • Do this separately for different household types • since CB varies with number of children, if pool, worry that CB is just picking up variations in spending patterns across household types.

  10. Data & Methodology • “stuff” includes year/month/region dummies, controls for children’s age, age of head of household, lone father dummy. • Household types: • Couples, 1 child • Couples, 2 children • Lone parents, 1 child • Lone parents, 2 children

  11. Expenditure patterns

  12. Basic results Test: MPC(CB)=MPC(othexp) ?

  13. Basic results Test: MPC(CB)=MPC(othexp) ?

  14. Basic results Test: MPC(CB)=MPC(othexp) ?

  15. Basic results Test: MPC(CB)=MPC(othexp) ?

  16. Initial conclusions • Results suggest CB is spent differently from other income • Spent disproportionately on adult-assignable goods rather that child-assignable goods • But this does not have to imply that parents favour themselves over their children. • It could be that they place so much weight on the welfare of their children that they insure them against income variations.

  17. Results robust to • Quadratic specification (MPCs calculated at mean). • Including households on welfare • Accounting for purchase infrequency – instrumenting expenditure with income • Tobit specification (zeroes) • Splitting sample into smokers / non-smokers • Splitting sample by time (1980s / 1990s)

  18. Anticipated and unanticipated CB effects • assume households form static expectations of real CB – i.e. will be indexed in line with inflation since the last increase • decompose CB into anticipated / unanticipated parts • allow the two components to enter separately in the Engel curves • find that it is unanticipated CB variation that is reflected in adult assignable good expenditure

  19. Conclusions • Policy-induced unanticipated variation in CB is spent differently from other income • disproportionately on goods consumed predominantly by adults • Consistent with the view that parents place so much weight on the welfare of their children that they fully insure them against any unexpected policy changes. • Suggests that families would gain from more certainty about their future benefit incomes.

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