Moullin Sophie, Milne Barry
Centre of Methods and Policy Applications in the Social Sciences (COMPASS), The School of Social Sciences, University of Auckland, 1010, New Zealand.
Centre of Methods and Policy Applications in the Social Sciences (COMPASS), The School of Social Sciences, University of Auckland, 1010, New Zealand.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 Mar;161:107260. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2025.107260. Epub 2025 Jan 25.
Child abuse and neglect is recorded at higher rates in families with low incomes, and in contexts with lower public spending on families. However, it is not clear whether modest cash transfers could reduce rates.
To estimate the effects of unconditional cash transfers to mothers with children under 3 years of age on child abuse and neglect.
In 2018, New Zealand - an ethnically diverse rich democracy with above average child poverty - introduced a "Families Package" of largely unconditional cash transfers for mothers of children aged 0-3. The majority of the package comprised a universal payment for children aged 0-1 of NZ$60 (US$37) a week, and a payment of up to that amount for families in all but the top third of incomes for children aged 1-3. Mothers chose whether to receive payments weekly, monthly or annually. We use administrative data for all children born in New Zealand between 2013 and 2019 (N = 172,170).
Difference-in-difference estimation compared the difference in child abuse and neglect for 3-year-olds born before and after the introduction of the Families Package in July 2018, with the differences between the same birth month periods for children born in the previous 3 years.
The Families Package reduced the odds of child protective services' referrals to family services in non-urgent cases of suspected maltreatment by 19 % overall (OR: 0.81, CI: 0.80-0.81, p = 0.003). The reduction was 26 % (OR: 0.74, CI: 0.61-0.91, p = 0.003) both for Māori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, and for those for whom child protective services had a record of concern for older siblings. The Families Package also reduced substantiated cases of neglect in single mother families (OR 0.6, CI 0.38-0.93, p = 0.022). There were no significant effects on urgent cases, substantiations of physical or emotional abuse, or hospitalizations for traumatic brain injuries.
Small unconditional cash transfers in early childhood can lead to meaningful reductions in non-acute cases of suspected child abuse and neglect among at-risk groups.
在低收入家庭以及家庭公共支出较低的环境中,虐待和忽视儿童的记录率更高。然而,尚不清楚适度的现金转移是否能够降低发生率。
评估向有3岁以下子女的母亲提供无条件现金转移对虐待和忽视儿童情况的影响。
2018年,新西兰——一个种族多样的富裕民主国家,儿童贫困率高于平均水平——推出了一项“家庭套餐”,主要是向0至3岁儿童的母亲提供无条件现金转移。该套餐的大部分内容包括为0至1岁儿童每周提供60新西兰元(37美元)的普遍补贴,以及为收入不在前收入前三分之一的1至3岁儿童家庭提供同等金额的补贴。母亲们可以选择每周、每月或每年领取补贴。我们使用了2013年至2019年在新西兰出生的所有儿童的行政数据(N = 172,170)。
采用差分估计法,比较了2018年7月推出“家庭套餐”前后出生的3岁儿童在虐待和忽视儿童方面的差异,以及前三年同一出生月份期间出生的儿童之间的差异。
“家庭套餐”总体上使儿童保护服务机构将非紧急疑似虐待案件转介至家庭服务的几率降低了19%(比值比:0.81,置信区间:0.80 - 0.81,p = 0.003)。对于新西兰原住民毛利人以及儿童保护服务机构有年长兄弟姐妹受关注记录的人群,这一降幅为26%(比值比:0.74,置信区间:0.61 - 0.91,p = 0.003)。“家庭套餐”还减少了单亲家庭中经证实的忽视案例(比值比0.6,置信区间0.38 - 0.93,p = 0.022)。对紧急情况、身体或情感虐待的证实或创伤性脑损伤住院情况没有显著影响。
幼儿期的小额无条件现金转移可使高危群体中疑似虐待和忽视儿童的非急性案例显著减少。