Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Study: Child care aid would hike mothers in workforce

- By Catarina Saraiva and Olivia Rockeman

Subsidizin­g child care, a key part of President Joe Biden’s pandemic recovery legislatio­n that has so far failed to pass into law, would increase the number of mothers in the workforce and boost wages for industry workers, among other social and economic benefits, according to a new study.

For households making up to 250% of the national median income — which is $90,657 for a family of four — a federal program that would cover child care costs exceeding 7% of that family’s income would boost mothers’ employment by 6 percentage points, and 10 percentage points for those working full-time, economists led by Jonathan Borowsky, a postdoctor­al associate at the University of Minnesota, said in a paper.

“The model estimates suggest that expansion of childcare subsidies would mitigate family income gaps in access to licensed care facilities, moving families from unlicensed care to centerbase­d care in particular,” according to the paper circulated by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

“These shifts also facilitate meaningful increases in maternal employment and imply improvemen­ts in the quality of care experience­d by children.”

The U.S. is an outlier among wealthy nations in not guaranteei­ng child-care assistance for working parents — a problem exacerbate­d by the pandemic in driving up already-high facilities costs, impacting children’s preparedne­ss for school and forcing more women out of the labor force than men. Lawmakers have proposed various ideas to help bolster the industry, though none have yet succeeded.

The paper’s authors created three models, each reflecting different degrees of subsidies, based on existing legislatio­n.

The broadest, which includes capping the amount of money a family spends on child care at 7% of income, is based on Mr. Biden’s proposal in the Build Back Better Act. In that scenario, the gains in the job market would be driven by low-income mothers, whose fulltime employment would likely increase by 18.2 percentage points.

Some 68% of U.S. mothers with children ages 3 to 5 are employed, only higher than eight other countries out of 40 in the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, the authors found. A broad expansion in child-care subsidies would increase that share to 78%, which would catapult the U. S. into ninth place in mothers’ employment among the richest nations.

By increasing demand for the services, child-care subsidies would boost hourly wages for industry workers, who make an average $12.12 per hour and are disproport­ionately women of color.

Wages could increase as much as 29% for teachers with a bachelor’s degree, and 14% for those without one, the authors found.

Child care workers have been slow to return to the industry since the pandemic.

 ?? Jeff Swensen/For The Washington Post ?? Chelsea Hallinan, 37, organizes children's take-home packets while they nap at the Begin With Us Pre-K Center in Altoona in 2021.
Jeff Swensen/For The Washington Post Chelsea Hallinan, 37, organizes children's take-home packets while they nap at the Begin With Us Pre-K Center in Altoona in 2021.

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