The Economic Imperative of Affordable Childcare

Episode 434 | Host: Emilie Aries | Guest: Nicole Riehl

Could equitable caregiving systems transform our economy?

The business case for affordable, quality care.

Let’s just say it like it is: childcare in our country is out of reach for far too many.

Systemic and economic barriers exist whether mothers (or fathers) want to stay home with their kids or want to return to work. The former can’t afford it, and the latter often don’t make enough at their jobs to break even on the cost of daycare. Something must change.

Nicole Riehl is one of the brilliant minds leading this charge. She’s a national expert and thought leader on childhood solutions and investment into early childcare and the president and CEO of EPIC—Executives Partnering to Invest in Children. She leads a team that is empowering employers to put their influence behind community childcare initiatives and infrastructure.

I sat down with Nicole to learn how this became such a glaring problem in the U.S. and what these fresh approaches and initiatives could mean for our economy as a whole.

So many workforce changes, so few system changes

Women entering the workforce en masse is just one example of the countless ways our economic realities have changed in the past century. In fact, following the she-cession of 2020, when women's workforce participation rates dropped to lows last seen in the 1980s, women's workforce participation in 2023 has reached a new all-time record of 77%.

Despite this shift, which has been happening for decades, initiatives and infrastructure in childcare in the U.S. have not caught up with the times, and systems that match our contemporary interests remain fragmented, broken, or altogether nonexistent.

Parents who want to work often discover it isn’t worth it—their paychecks barely break even once they factor in childcare costs. On the flip side, as it becomes harder and harder to raise a family on a single income, those who do want to remain home with their children find it increasingly difficult to do so.

Available and affordable childcare is a win-win

The research shows that this deficient care economy is losing the U.S. economy more than 120 billion dollars a year. Parents want to work and businesses are desperate for talent, so why are systems proven to work so well in other countries still lacking here at home?

The problem may once have been the refusal of business owners to recognize the vital need for childcare for their employees, but Nicole points out that these days, most of them get it. The connection is obvious: industry growth and innovation are vital to economic growth, and developing the workforce is vital to industry growth. Especially in the aftermath of the pandemic, it’s become glaringly obvious that the value proposition for retaining a quality team has changed, and access to childcare is right at the top of that list, for entry- and executive-level job seekers alike.

The new barrier to change is the knowledge of how to go about building these systems - and the political will to do so

Businesses don’t have to go it alone

Nicole and EPIC bring together early childhood advocates with business owners and executives who recognize all these issues and just need support bringing this future to life. EPIC educates organizations on how to broach equitable conversations around childcare needs and engage with communities to be advocates for these systems beyond their companies’ double doors.

They also help businesses access some pretty neat government incentives. For example, businesses that build on-campus childcare centers can receive nearly a million dollars toward developing these facilities.

Community projects can take a long time to come to fruition, with all their committees and moving parts. These executives, though, know the right people and have the resources and funds to speed up the process, creating daycare centers that not only provide their employees with a safe, affordable space for their little loved ones but also employment opportunities for small business owners in the childcare sector.

Better childcare policy and infrastructure is one of so many essential adjustments we need to truly create an equitable and sustainable workforce. Our new Systemic Solutions page connects you with the policy advocates and organizations who need your support to push these priorities over the finish line. Head to bossedup.org/takeaction to find more information on the systemic solutions that we're advocating for, and I hope you’ll join me in taking action.

I hope that together, Bossed Up can be a part of broader solution-building, coalition-building, and making the systemic progress we need alongside our individual actions and advocacy.

Related Links from today’s episode:

EPIC’s website

Nicole Riehl’s LinkedIn

Nicole Riehl’s Twitter

Nicole’s podcast, “The Dropoff”

GenXYZ 2023 - Top 25 Young Professionals

Denver Business Journal - Outstanding Women in Business Award

US Chamber of Commerce Foundation

Bipartisan Policy Center

Council for Strong America

Roadmap with The ECE Employer Roadmap - US Chamber of Commerce Foundation

Leadership Denver

Proposition EE

Employer-Based Childcare Design Lab

Ai-Jen Poo’s Care Fest

Take Action: advocate for the policy reforms that drive gender equity at work, including access to affordable, quality care

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

LET’S ADVOCATE FOR THE POLICIES THAT DRIVE GENDER EQUALITY
AT WORK:

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