Title: Linking Economic Development and Child Care
1Linking Economic Development and Child Care
Presented to
- Mildred E. Warner Ph.D.
- Dept of City and Regional Planning
- Cornell University
- http//economicdevelopment.cce.cornell.edu
2What is the Economic Importance of Child Care?
- Children - Human development (cognitive and
social skills) - Parents Choice career ladders, labor
productivity - Regions Child care employment, children served,
regional economic linkage - Society Sustainability, Social infrastructure
3Impact on Children
- Early Care and education promotes cognitive
social and emotional development of children - Expenditures (-) are now being reinterpreted as
investments (). - Concerns
- Too much emphasis given to high returns from
model programs - Focus on preschool alone is inadequate
- Targeting misses the importance of child care as
a community infrastructure and broader societal
benefits
4Wide Variation in Returns All Positive
- Model studies show wide variation in benefitcost
ratios due to differences in person, place and
context - Abecedarian 31
- Chicago Parent Child 71
- Perry Preschool 71 (171 to age 40)
- Do not expect similar returns when take model
programs to scale - Universal preschool estimated benefit 11
- Middle class children receive great benefit from
public preschool since least likely to receive
private preschool without subsidies. To improve
access and society benefit, focus on all
children, not just poor children.
5Where Children Spend Their Time
Preschool is not enough! Why so much focus on
formal care when children spend so little time
there?
Average Time Allocation of Children Under 12 in
Two-Child, Two-Parent Families in 1997, Based on
Folbre 2006 analysis PSID-CD
6Need a More Comprehensive View
- Economic returns are highest when all levels of
human ecology are considered
Regional Economy, Policy Environment ECE system
quality, supply
Parent Environment Workplace policy
Child Environment Home, child care
Morrissey, Taryn and M.E. Warner 2007. Why Early
Care and Education Deserves as Much Attention, or
More, than Prekindergarten Alone Applied
Developmental Science, 11(2) 57-70.
7Impact on Parents
- Florida Economic Impact study estimated 186,000
families with children under age six where both
parents work. (approx. 630,000 children under
age 6 whose parents work). Estimated parental
earnings of 5.6 billion. - Quality child care reduces absenteeism (by
30-40) and turnover in the parent labor force.
The average parent misses 9-13 workdays per year
due to child care failures. - Parents need flexibility in three domains work,
child care and family responsibilities (Emlen
1998) - Current child care choices are too constrained
- Attention to parents needs must be part of
workforce policy - Shellenback, K. 2004. Child Care and Parent
Productivity Making the Business Case, Cornell
Report
8The Historic Increase in Mothers Labor Force
Participation Rates in the U.S. Has Leveled Off
Attention to parents needs must be part of
workforce policy
Folbre, 2006 based on BLS
9Market and Household Care
- Quality child care is provided in the home and in
the market. - Home care is the foundation for labor force
participation of parents and school readiness of
children. - We can not focus just on market or formal types
of child care. - We need a system that supports the child care
sector, and supports parents in their dual role
as parents and workers.
10The Value of Womens Child Care Services Exceeds
their Earnings
Folbre, 2006 based on ATUS 2003 using replacement
cost approach
11Iceberg Give Attention to Both Market and
Household Care
Formal Market Care Economic Development and
Educational Policy Informal Care Strategies to
improve quality Household Care Workplace and Tax
Policy
12Regional Economy and Policy
- Child Care is a critical community infrastructure
(Planning Magazine June 2007) - Incorporate in housing, transportation planning
and infrastructure - Child care should be included in community
planning, transportation planning, disaster
planning (FEMA, HR 3495) - Data collection, reinvestment after a disaster,
public/private partnerships
13(No Transcript)
14Child care - Part of state and local economic
development policy
- According to a 2006 survey of New York States
economic development and Chamber of Commerce
Leaders - 83 agree that childcare should be a part of
economic development policy. - 82 recognize that a lack of affordable,
quality, convenient child care reduces worker
productivity. - 67 feel that businesses ability to attract
and retain workers is hurt by lack of quality
child care. - 58 acknowledge an inadequate supply of quality
child care in their community.
15Data Deficit
- We need better analysis of supply and demand for
child care - Dont over build child care centers without
subsidies for parents - We need a better sense of what parents want and
can afford - Average price of center care in Florida
4,000-6,000 - Average annual wage in Florida 30,000
- Percent of income parents spent on child care
6-17 - We need a better understanding of the structure
of the ECE sector itself - 15,400 providers, 46,500 workers, 626,000
children (Florida Economic Impact study based on
2000 data)
16Child Care A Critical Economic Sector
- We do not have enough data on the size and
structure of the child care sector - We do know Florida parents and their children
need quality, affordable care. - We also know child care has a large economic
impact - The child care sector has higher regional
economic linkage than other sectors which receive
more economic development attention (Tourisms
hotels and lodging, Retail). - Employment and output in child care are larger
than for job training, higher education,
hospitals and inter-urban passenger transit.
17Refocus Economic Development Policy
- The Primary Focus is Export Growth Promotion and
Industrial Recruitment - Manufacturing and information technology seen as
primary drivers. - Tax abatements and infrastructure development are
the primary policy tools - Service sectors and local demand are largely
ignored - Focus is on industry, not workers
- Kay, Pratt and Warner. 2007. Role of Services in
Regional Economy Growth, Growth and Change
38(3)419-442.
18Importance of Local Services
- Local services, like child care, account for the
largest employment and highest growth across the
US. - You can not export child care
- Need high staffchild ratios to ensure quality
- Economic policy has traditionally ignored local
services such as child care - Household production shifted to market
- Supply spontaneously generates
- Quality in such a market based approach is low
- Need economic development policy to strengthen
the sector
19ECE Market Challenges
- ECE is an underdeveloped market sector
- Providers lack economies of scale
- Low profitability leads to high turnover and
suppresses quality - Providers and parents lack information to
distinguish quality - Parents lack effective demand to influence supply
and quality of care - Market challenges can be addressed with economic
development solutions - Warner, et al 2004. Economic Development
Strategies to Promote Quality Child Care, Ithaca,
NY Cornell Univ.
20Economic Development Principles and Strategies
- Strategies to strengthen the ECE sector
- Tax Credits for child care to support parents,
programs, workers and employers (Geoff Nagel) - Consumer Information for parents and providers
(Quality Rating Systems Harriet Dichter) - Business Management shared services and other
collective management strategies (Louise Stoney) - Workforce Development funds to train child care
workers, support working parents and strengthen
the child care sector (Abby Thorman) - Capital Finance for facilities and operating
capital (CRA, NMTC, CDBG) - Infrastructure Planning transportation (ISTEA)
21(No Transcript)
22ECE Can Strengthen and Refocus Economic
Development Policy
- Bringing ECE to the economic development table,
has the potential to rationalize economic
development policy - Shift the focus from industrial attraction, to
investments in productivity and sustainability - ECE offers economic development benefits in the
short term, not just the long term - Economic development policy is based on
incentives this would be a new approach to
improve sustainability in the ECE sector
23Cautions Economic Development Policy
- Economic development approaches are a complement,
not a substitute, to broader public sector
support. - Economic development incentives must be applied
with caution, because competition erodes quality
in care work. - Economic development policy itself is often
poorly designed.
24Broader Policy Implications
- In the long term quality ECE improves the human
capital critical for a competitive economy. - Market failures in our ECE system
- Our market based system of care undermines
quality - Markets focus on short term, but society needs
long term investment - Parents seek convenience and low cost, but
children and society need high quality - This is why our competitor OECD nations provide
greater levels of public investment in ECE. - Market failures must be addressed with public
sector solutions investment, regulations
25The U.S. Under-Invests in Children and Families
- We don't see a collapsing care system because we
don't see care as a system to begin with. - (Mona Harrington 1999 Care and Equality (p 25)
- Public Expenditure
- Enrollment in publicly funded ECE
- Ages 1-2 U.S. 6, Europe 3-74
- Ages 3-5 U.S. 53, Europe 66-99
- Expenditure US lt 0.5 of GDP on ECE, Europe 2-6
of GDP - Work Place Policy
- Full time work U.S. 40 hrs/week, Europe 35-39
hrs/week - Required vacation U.S. 0 days, Europe 20-25
days/year. - Maternity leave U.S. 0 weeks, Europe 12 42
weeks - Sources Kammerman 2001, Gornick and Myers 2003
26Why Does the U.S. Under-Invest in ECE?
- It depends on how we frame the debate
- Private Frame - Early care and education is the
private responsibility of parents - Failures are
moral, not structural - Beginning to see ECE as a public responsibility
too - Welfare Frame focuses on poor children only
Head Start, subsidies. - But these have expanded since Welfare Reform
- Education Frame Public responsibility for
education begins at age 5 - Increased public support for pre-school
- Economic Development Frame focuses on
infrastructure for the market not support for
both market and family care - Economic developers see child care as social
infrastructure for economic development
27A Comprehensive Solution
- Institutional Support for ECE Programs to ensure
quality. - Publicly Funded Infrastructure to ensure ECE
professional development, program monitoring,
consumer education, data collection and employer
education. - Financial Aid for Families to ensure access to
quality. - Work Place Policies (e.g. paid parental leave,
flexible work schedules with full benefits) to
ensure parents can pursue careers and have time
to nurture their children. - Stoney, Mitchell and Warner 2006. Smarter Reform
Moving Beyond Single Program Solutions to an
Early Care and Education System, Community
Development The Journal of the Community
Development Society 37 (2) 101-115
28Where do we go from here?
- Cultivate connections between economic
development leaders and child care partners in
your community - Share leadership and expertise.
- Tap into new sources of private (banks, credit
unions) and public funds (CDBG, USDA, tax
credits) for child care - Link to transportation dollars
- Improve data systems include child care data in
economic development and transportation planning - Include child care leaders in economic
development planning.
29Resources http//economicdevelopment.cce.cornell.
edu
30Cornells Linking Economic Development and Child
Care Project Reportscan be found at
http//economicdevelopment.cce.cornell.edu