Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 8
US Politicians Push Child-Care Relief as 48% of Parents Report Overwhelming Stress
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 8

US Politicians Push Child-Care Relief as 48% of Parents Report Overwhelming Stress

2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 8

Summary

  • New Mexico has become the first state to cover child care for all residents, while New York and San Francisco mayors pledged major free-child-care efforts and Democrats weigh making universal child care a 2028 platform plank.
  • Republicans are also shifting: last year’s domestic policy bill made 4 million more families eligible for a child-care tax credit and added incentives for employers that provide care.
  • 48% of parents say stress is completely overwhelming on most days, versus 26% of other adults, after the U.S. surgeon general in 2024 labeled parental stress a public health crisis.
  • Child-care costs have more than tripled since 1990, and 7 in 10 Americans now say raising children is unaffordable, helping push family strain and fertility worries into mainstream politics.

Insights

Could government efforts to make childcare affordable inadvertently worsen the shortage of qualified caregivers across the United States?
Why is childcare both unaffordable for parents and unprofitable for providers, and can new policies fix this market failure?