Las Vegas Review-Journal

US is an outlier in how nations pay for child care

- By Claire Cain Miller

Typical 2-year-olds in Denmark attend child care during the day, where they are guaranteed a spot, and their parents pay no more than 25% of the cost. That guaranteed spot will remain until the children are in afterschoo­l care at age 10. If their parents choose to stay home or hire a nanny, the government helps pay for that, too.

Two-year-olds in the United States are less likely to attend formal child care. If they do, their parents pay full price — an average $1,100 a month — and compete to find a spot. If their parents stay home or find another arrangemen­t, they are also on their own to finance it, as they will be until kindergart­en.

In the developed world, the United States is an outlier in its low levels of financial support for young children’s care — something Democrats, with their safety net spending bill, are trying to change. The U.S. spends 0.2% of its GDP on child care for children 2 and under — which amounts to about $200 a year for most families, in the form of a once-a-year tax credit for parents who pay for care.

The other wealthy countries in the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t spend an average of 0.7% of GDP on toddlers, mainly through heavily subsidized child care. Denmark, for example, spends $23,140 annually per child on care for children 2 and under.

“We as a society, with public funding, spend so much less on children before kindergart­en than once they reach kindergart­en,” said Elizabeth Davis, an economist studying child care at the University of Minnesota. “And yet the science of child developmen­t shows how very important investment in the youngest ages are, and we get societal benefits from those investment­s.”

Congress is negotiatin­g the details of the spending bill, and many elements are likely to be cut to decrease the cost. The current draft of the child care plan would make attendance at licensed child care centers free for the lowest-earning families, and it would cost no more than 7% of family income for those earning up to double the state’s median income. It would provide universal public preschool for children ages 3 and 4. And it

would increase the pay of child care workers and preschool teachers to be equivalent to elementary teachers (currently, the median hourly wage for a preschool teacher of 4-year-olds is $14.67, and for a kindergart­en teacher of 5-year-olds $32.80.)

The United States spends more than any OECD country except Luxembourg on education in elementary school through college. But Americans have long had mixed feelings about whether young children should stay home with family or go to child care. Some Republican­s say direct payments to parents would give them the choice to enroll in child care or stay home. Though many red states have public preschool, some Republican­s have said they do not want the federal government involved. Some business groups oppose how the Biden spending bill would be paid for: increased taxes on businesses and wealthy Americans.

The pandemic, though, has forced the issue.

“I’ve been writing these reports saying this is a crisis for more than 30 years — it’s not new,” said Gina Adams, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute. “But the pandemic reminded people that child care is a linchpin of our economy. Parents can’t work without it. It’s gotten to a point where the costs of not investing are much, much more clear.”

Overall, federal, state and local government­s spend about $1,000 a year on care for low-income children ages 2 and under, and $200 on other toddlers, according to a paper for the Hamilton Project at Brookings, by Davis and Aaron Sojourner, also an economist at the University of Minnesota.

Some states and cities offer public preschool, starting at age 3 or 4. But just seven states (and Washington, D.C.) serve more than half of 4-year-olds, and 14 states have no public preschool or serve less than 10% of children, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research.

For children under 3, only the poorest working families qualify for subsidies, through Early Head Start or the child care block grant, but fewer than 1 in 6 eligible children receive the help. For most families, the only direct government support for early care and education comes from the child and dependent care tax credit. It benefits higher earners most: The average credit is $586, and $124 for the lowest earners.

The situation is much different in many rich countries. In Europe, new parents have paid leaves of 14 months, on average, and it is common for children to start public school at age 3. (In the preschool years, the focus is on play — toddlers aren’t sitting at desks doing work sheets.)

For children ages 1 and 2, parents are expected to pay more for child care, and there are similar tensions as in the United States about whether it’s best for children to be home with their parents, said Hans Bos, senior vice president studying education policy at the American Institutes for Research. But government­s still pay a significan­t portion of the cost of care — including payments for stay-at-home parents in countries including Finland, South Korea and Denmark.

Nordic countries have the most generous child care systems, including free care for low-income families. In Denmark, in addition to heavily subsidized care for children up to age 10, which is mostly government-run but includes private centers and home-based care, parents of toddlers receive a quarterly child benefit of $700.

In Germany, children can attend forms of “kita” from early months through elementary school. In some places, parents pay tuition based on their income, and in others, including Berlin and Hamburg, it is free. In France, parents of babies and toddlers receive tax credits of up to 85% of the cost of attending child care centers called crèches or hiring home-based “childminde­rs,” before public preschool begins at age 2 or 3.

Parents pay a much larger share of their earnings in certain other countries, but still receive more government assistance than in the United States. Japan has subsidized child care, but parents’ share of tuition is large and it is very hard to find spots. England and Ireland offer free preschool, but only for a few hours a day.

Government­s sometimes help pay for child care to further various policy goals.

One is increasing fertility (though studies have found government policies don’t necessaril­y make people have more babies over the long run).

Another goal is increasing women’s labor force participat­ion. In Europe, research shows, child care has had a bigger effect on this measure than policies like paid parental leave. Studies in the United States have also found that subsidized child care and preschool increase the chance that mothers keep working, particular­ly low-income women.

A third goal is ensuring that children of all background­s are equally prepared. Rich families can more easily afford high-quality care, which contribute­s to achievemen­t gaps as early as kindergart­en. Research in the United States shows that children are less likely to have formal child care if their parents are low earners, Hispanic or aren’t college graduates. Universal programs have been shown to shrink the gap in kindergart­en readiness. Yet in the United States, 1 in 3 American children start kindergart­en without any preschool at all.

 ?? MATHIAS SVOLD / NEW YORK TIMES FILE ?? Children take part in a procession to commemorat­e Saint Lucy’s Day on Nov. 29, 2019, at a public child care center in Copenhagen, Denmark. Rich countries contribute an average of $14,000 per year for a toddler’s care, compared with $500 in the U.S.
MATHIAS SVOLD / NEW YORK TIMES FILE Children take part in a procession to commemorat­e Saint Lucy’s Day on Nov. 29, 2019, at a public child care center in Copenhagen, Denmark. Rich countries contribute an average of $14,000 per year for a toddler’s care, compared with $500 in the U.S.
 ?? MATHIAS SVOLD / NEW YORK TIMES FILE ?? Children, ages 2 and 3, eat lunch Nov. 29, 2019, at a public child care center in Copenhagen, Denmark.
MATHIAS SVOLD / NEW YORK TIMES FILE Children, ages 2 and 3, eat lunch Nov. 29, 2019, at a public child care center in Copenhagen, Denmark.

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