2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2007.06.005
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Asset holding and net worth among households with children: Differences by household type

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Cited by 33 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…Others find that single male-headed households and cohabitating households differ little from traditional married households in wealth accumulation (Ozawa and Lee 2006; Yamokoski and Keister 2006). Grinstein-Weiss et al (2008), however, found that male-headed and female-headed households with at least one child accumulate 9 % and 15 % less wealth, respectively, than do married-parent households. A number of researchers have found that single women with children have the lowest overall asset levels (Grinstein-Weiss et al 2008; Ozawa and Lee 2006; Warren et al 2001; Yamokoski and Keister 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…Others find that single male-headed households and cohabitating households differ little from traditional married households in wealth accumulation (Ozawa and Lee 2006; Yamokoski and Keister 2006). Grinstein-Weiss et al (2008), however, found that male-headed and female-headed households with at least one child accumulate 9 % and 15 % less wealth, respectively, than do married-parent households. A number of researchers have found that single women with children have the lowest overall asset levels (Grinstein-Weiss et al 2008; Ozawa and Lee 2006; Warren et al 2001; Yamokoski and Keister 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Grinstein-Weiss et al (2008), however, found that male-headed and female-headed households with at least one child accumulate 9 % and 15 % less wealth, respectively, than do married-parent households. A number of researchers have found that single women with children have the lowest overall asset levels (Grinstein-Weiss et al 2008; Ozawa and Lee 2006; Warren et al 2001; Yamokoski and Keister 2006). Finally, marital disruption penalizes wealth accumulation (Warren et at.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…Relationship history also matters (Hao 1996;Waite and Gallagher 2000). Married individuals save more, have higher likelihoods of attaining affluence, and accumulate more wealth than cohabiting, divorced, and other nonmarried persons (Grinstein-Weiss et al 2008;Hirschl et al 2003;Holden and Kuo 1996;Wilmoth and Koso 2002).…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…This is particularly evident in families headed by single women. Grinstein-Weiss et al (2008) show that single women with children have the lowest overall asset levels, while Ozawa and Lee (2008) find that these types of households accumulate less wealth overall.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%