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9/15/2021

Treasury Releases Report Showing U.S. Childcare System Overburdens Families and Causes Shortages Due to Inadeq…

Treasury Releases Report Showing U.S. Childcare System
Overburdens Families and Causes Shortages Due to Inadequate
Supply
September 15, 2021

Vice President Kamala Harris and Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen to Make Case for
Build Back Better Agenda
This Will be Vice President Harris’s First Visit to the Department of Treasury Since Taking O ice

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of the Treasury released a new report today on the
state of the child care market that highlights the causes and ramifications of insu icient
supply, causing shortages in communities around the country. The release of the report will
be announced today by Vice President of the United States Kamala Harris and U.S. Secretary
of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen during an event at the Department. The Treasury
Department’s new study underscores the need to pass President Biden’s Build Back Better
agenda, which would make child care more a ordable by o ering universal preschool to all
3- and 4-year-old children, expanding the tax credits for child care, and providing access to
high-quality child care for low- and middle-income children.
“It’s past time that we treat childcare as what it is – an element whose contribution to
economic growth is as essential as infrastructure or energy,” Secretary Yellen said. “This is
why the Biden Administration has prioritized the Build Back Better proposals, many of which
are now moving through Congress. Enacting them is the single most important thing we can
do to build a stronger economy over the next several decades.”
The Treasury Department report, which was produced by the O ice of Economic Policy and
authored by acting Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy, Catherine Wolfram, describes the
existing child care system in the United States, which relies on private financing to provide
care for most children, and documents how this system fails to adequately serve many
families.

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0354

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9/15/2021

Treasury Releases Report Showing U.S. Childcare System Overburdens Families and Causes Shortages Due to Inadeq…

Currently, the average family with at least one child under the age of 5 would need to devote
approximately 13 percent of family income to pay for childcare. O entimes, parents are
asked to pay for child care when they can least a ord it and with little ability to borrow
against their future savings to cover the costs of care for young children. This is an example
of what economists describe as liquidity constraints, a classic market failure, which argues in
favor of government support. Second, the spillover aspects of providing children a highquality early educational experience – what economists call “positive externalities” – also
argue in favor of providing direct relief for families.
The Biden Administration has proposed to reform the market by o ering universal preschool
to all 3- and 4-year-old children and expanding access to high-quality child care for low- and
middle-income children. The child care plan would cut spending in half for most American
families so that families do not have to spend more than 7 percent of their income on child
care for young children by creating subsidized care and extending the expanded Child and
Dependent Care Tax Credit. These steps would directly address the revenue shortfalls
created by the market failures the report identifies: the liquidity constraints and the positive
externalities associated with child care. While the existing system leads to chronic
underinvestment in children and hinders many parents’ ability to contribute to the nation’s
economy and make a solid living, a well-funded child care sector will help achieve more of
our economic potential.
A link to the full report is here.
The event with Vice President Harris and Secretary Yellen will begin at 4:00 p.m. ET and can
be viewed at whitehouse.gov/live

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0354

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