How Did the Canada Child Benefit Affect Household Spending?
Author(s) -
Paniz Najjarrezaparast,
Krishna Pendakur
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
canadian public policy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.397
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1911-9917
pISSN - 0317-0861
DOI - 10.3138/cpp.2020-137
Subject(s) - clothing , renting , recreation , demographic economics , consumer spending , health spending , agricultural economics , household income , economics , affect (linguistics) , low income , business , labour economics , socioeconomics , health care , economic growth , geography , psychology , health insurance , political science , archaeology , communication , recession , keynesian economics , law
We assess how the July 2016 increase in the Canada Child Benefit (CCB) affected household spending with respect to total current expenditure and its seven constituent categories: clothing, food, health care, household operations, recreation, shelter, and transportation. The increase in the CCB was large: for most recipient households, it increased by more than $2,000 per child per year. We consider households below the median income level and find statistically significant effects of the policy change only for spending on clothing, food, and shelter and only for rental-tenure households. We find that rental-tenure households with children that fell below the median income level increased their annual expenditure by about $3,400 in response to the CCB increase. Spending on food increased by roughly $700; spending on shelter, by nearly $1,400. Spending on clothing increased by roughly $350, but spending mainly increased on children’s clothing, not on adults’ clothing.
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