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The Daily Signal
Unintended Consequence of $15 Minimum Wage: Higher Child Care Costs
Rachel Greszler
February 11, 2021
Many families struggle to find child care, especially at a cost they
can afford. A $15 federal minimum wage could make child care
unattainable for millions more families.
Higher wages are a great thing, especially for child care workers who
serve such an important role in the lives of children and families. But
the reality is that higher wages that come from government mandates
result in unintended consequences.
A new Heritage Foundation study estimates that a $15 minimum wage would
increase the cost of child care by 21%, on average, across the U.S.,
adding an extra $3,728 in costs for a family with two children.
This is because child care wages can be lower than the proposed $15 per
hour minimum—the median wage was $11.65 per hour in 2019—and child care
providers’ hands are tied through regulations that prevent them from
responding to minimum wage hikes in the ways that many other businesses
do.
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Whereas many businesses would respond to being forced by the government
to raise wages by laying off workers, reducing employees’ hours,
cutting back on other forms of compensation, or automating jobs, child
care providers do not have these options.
Child care regulations strictly specify teacher-to-child ratios,
square-footage requirements, and virtually every aspect of a child care
environment.
While fast-food restaurants can replace cashiers with kiosks and Amazon
can replace warehouse workers with machines, it’s unlikely that robots
will ever be able to watch children (nor would parents want that).
Consequently, almost the entirety of wage increases for child care
workers would be passed onto families. But cost increases would not be
equal across the U.S.
Families in lower-cost areas—especially those in the South and
Midwest—would experience the largest increases. Child care prices would
rise by more than 30%, on average, in 10 states, including a whopping
43% increase in Mississippi.
This would translate into thousands of extra dollars per year in child care costs for many families.
While the average increase in costs for a family with two children
would be $3,728, costs would rise by more than $6,000 per year in Iowa
($6,304) and Indiana ($6,028), and by more than $5,000 per year in
Kansas ($5,636), Louisiana ($5,487), Oklahoma ($5,602), Wisconsin
($5,227), Georgia ($5,222), and Nevada ($5,019).
Considering that child care for two children could cost upward of 40%
of the median household income in many states, a $15 minimum wage could
make child care unattainable for millions of families.
This could reduce employment and income among families with children.
In two-parent homes, it may no longer make financial sense for both
parents to work, even if the family is struggling to make ends meet.
Since women are more likely to stay home than men, this could widen
gender-based differences in the labor market.
Others—especially single-parent families—could have to resort to
non-licensed or illegal child care, or depend on unpaid child care of
friends and family.
The point is that all families have different needs and should be free to make decisions based on what’s best for them.
Some families have one parent at home. Others have both parents
working. And most single parents have no choice but to work. Bad policy
like the $15 federal minimum wage would hurt low-income and working
families the most by making the child care they need completely
unaffordable.
Unaffordable child care costs is just one of the many ways a $15
federal minimum wage would lead to a cascade of unintended consequences.
As the Congressional Budget Office estimated, there would also be
upward of 1.4 million job losses, fewer work opportunities, reduced
productivity, lower family incomes, a smaller economy, higher prices,
and even increased federal deficits and inflation.
There are better ways to help workers achieve lasting income gains, and
better ways to make child care more accessible and affordable.
Expanding apprenticeships and other alternative forms of education;
opening doors to entrepreneurial opportunities for lower-income workers
through occupational licensing reform and improved freedom to contract;
and reducing unnecessary regulations so that businesses can invest more
in workers are just a few ways to boost incomes without hurting others.
And by easing unnecessary regulations on child care providers, giving
parents choices on where to use existing public child care dollars, and
making it easier for parents to save for child care, policymakers could
help more families find the care they need, in an environment they
want, and at a cost they can afford.
Read this story with graphic, and others, at The Daily Signal
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