SunriseChampion
Senior Member
I went to visit my younger sister and her husband earlier this evening. They have a 2ish year old child and she's pregnant with another. She works as an ECE at a daycare in west Durham and their child goes there as well so they're entitled to a 20% employee discount and the price is still 1200$/mth.
ECEs' pay is rather low (under 20$/hr) and so, with the other one on the way, my sister has decided that it is cheaper to not work for the few years until the children are in school than it is to continue working during this time as the cost of childcare would mean that she'd effectively be working for free or, even for negative pay.
This will take her out of the workforce for the next four years.
Four years.
The child benefit is a joke except for those who are least able to support children (the poor) in that it does almost nothing to offset the cost of childcare if you're making anything above minimum wage.
How is it more economically beneficial to be taking able-bodied and capable people out of the workforce instead of having childcare be a nationally-subsidised programme?
Which system would truly cost society more?
I'm no expert, but it seems ass-backward to me.
ECEs' pay is rather low (under 20$/hr) and so, with the other one on the way, my sister has decided that it is cheaper to not work for the few years until the children are in school than it is to continue working during this time as the cost of childcare would mean that she'd effectively be working for free or, even for negative pay.
This will take her out of the workforce for the next four years.
Four years.
The child benefit is a joke except for those who are least able to support children (the poor) in that it does almost nothing to offset the cost of childcare if you're making anything above minimum wage.
How is it more economically beneficial to be taking able-bodied and capable people out of the workforce instead of having childcare be a nationally-subsidised programme?
Which system would truly cost society more?
I'm no expert, but it seems ass-backward to me.