So I called Kathryn Anne Edwards, an economist and economic policy consultant, to see if there’s an argument that might change people’s minds about the utter necessity of more robust government child care funding — or if I should lose all hope in the possibility of a shift in the way that child care is thought about, discussed and sustained in the United States.
labor force participation is midway through a historic decline.
In Edwards’s phrasing, it “has been frozen in time for 25 years.” When you see headlines about how we’re at all-time highs for women’s labor force participation, Edwards suggests, that’s misleading.
When you look at the actual level of increase since the 1990s, labor force participation among women has barely budged, and without a policy shift, we shouldn’t expect it to go up much in the coming years.
The second thing that could force Congress to act on child care is that the birthrate is on the decline in the United States, Edwards said.
Persons:
Kathryn Anne Edwards, Edwards, ”, ” Edwards, “, Peter G
Organizations:
Social, Peterson Foundation, Social Security
Locations:
United States