issue Families

Equitable Growth supports research and policy analysis on how unequal access to care, 21st century work-life policies, and education undermines stable, broad-based economic growth.

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Just as investment in physical capital is an important driver of economic growth, investment in human capital is key to the health of the economy as a whole, as well as family wellbeing. Equitable Growth supports research to better understand how unequal access to supportive environments, quality education, and other human capital development opportunities not only drives unequal outcomes for families but also undermines future economic growth.

Featured Research

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New evidence suggests that receiving benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program facilitates work in the long run

Inequality & MobilityFamiliesLabor
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What the minimum wage can tell us about the future of the U.S. child care system

FamiliesInequality & Mobility
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Factsheet: What the research says about the economics of the 2021 enhanced Child Tax Credit

FamiliesTax & Macroeconomics
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Factsheet: What the research says about the economic impacts of reproductive care

Inequality & MobilityFamiliesLabor
report

The child care economy

Families
Vision 2020

Promote economic and racial justice: Eliminate student loan debt and establish a right to higher education across the United States

Inequality & MobilityFamiliesLabor

Explore Content in Families951

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The economic costs of gun violence in the United States

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
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Algorithmic wage discrimination requires policy solutions that enforce predictability and the U.S. spirit of equal pay for equal work

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
working paper

On Algorithmic Wage Discrimination

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
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Equitable Growth delivers economist sign-on letter and comment letter to the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on its Proposed Revisions to Circular A-4, Regulatory Analysis

Tax & MacroeconomicsInequality & MobilityFamilies
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Paid sick leave means dads can spend more time caring for loved ones and less time worrying about missing work

FamiliesInequality & MobilityLabor
working paper

The Impact of Austerity on Gender Inequality in Time Allocation in the United States

FamiliesInequality & Mobility
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Wealth as a driver of income and consumption mobility in the United States

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
working paper

Intergenerational Mobility using Income, Consumption, and Wealth

Inequality & MobilityFamilies
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Food assistance can disrupt intergenerational poverty in the United States, promoting racial economic equity

FamiliesInequality & Mobility
working paper

The Effectiveness of the Food Stamp Program at Reducing Differences in the Intergenerational Persistence of Poverty

FamiliesInequality & Mobility
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Child care prices, inflation, and the end of federal pandemic-era aid in five charts

Families
working paper

Fitting the Bill? The First Federal Paid Leave Mandate

FamiliesLabor
TOPICS: Health, Paid Leave

Book

Finding Time

The Economics of Work-Life Conflict

By Heather Boushey

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Experts on the issue

Grantee

Rodney Andrews

University of Texas at Dallas

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Scholar

Gonçalo Costa

Graduate Center of the City University of New York

Ph.D. candidate

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Grantee

Javier Cravino

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

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Grantee

Marta Murray-Close

U.S. Census Bureau

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Grantee

Erin Kelly

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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