Nation's Care Crisis: When Families Need Affordable Family Care, Voters Support Candidates.
In the latest elections, voters sent a clear message: when it comes to affordable family care, candidates who champion its importance are rewarded with victory. Democratic candidates Zohran Mamdani, Mikie Sherrill, and Abigail Spanberger won high-profile races by putting reducing childcare costs at the center of their platforms.
As the US grapples with an affordability crisis, families across the country are feeling the squeeze from rising costs on everything from housing to groceries. But one pressing issue is often overlooked: care, including child care, older adult care, and disability care. Rising income inequality and a widening wealth gap have contributed to a care crisis that disproportionately affects women and families.
Economist Matthew Nestler notes that the care economy has become one of the stickiest sources of inflation in the US, with prices for home and community-based care increasing more than three times the pace of overall inflation since January 2024. In many states, the cost of caring for children has outpaced even housing and healthcare costs.
For working parents, particularly mothers, the impact is devastating. Polls from the Century Foundation show that women are having a harder time finding good-quality jobs due to care responsibilities and unaffordable options. Families are trapped between impossible choices: stay home and lose income or work just to pay for care.
These elections demonstrate that the US's affordability crisis is indeed a care crisis. Voters across party lines are demanding solutions, and candidates who prioritize care as a foundational economic issue are winning.
Leaders like Mamdani, Sherrill, and Spanberger are showing that putting care at the center of politics is common sense. Investing in care supports both families and the economy, enabling parents to participate in the workforce, providing paid leave for workers and families, and ensuring access to home and community-based services for older adults and people with disabilities.
As states like New Mexico, Connecticut, Washington, Colorado, California, and Rhode Island continue to innovate in their approach to care policies and support, it's clear that a sustained public investment in care is essential. Raising wages for care workers, expanding affordable childcare options, and ensuring equitable access to care across different stages of life are crucial steps towards addressing the country's affordability crisis.
In the latest elections, voters sent a clear message: when it comes to affordable family care, candidates who champion its importance are rewarded with victory. Democratic candidates Zohran Mamdani, Mikie Sherrill, and Abigail Spanberger won high-profile races by putting reducing childcare costs at the center of their platforms.
As the US grapples with an affordability crisis, families across the country are feeling the squeeze from rising costs on everything from housing to groceries. But one pressing issue is often overlooked: care, including child care, older adult care, and disability care. Rising income inequality and a widening wealth gap have contributed to a care crisis that disproportionately affects women and families.
Economist Matthew Nestler notes that the care economy has become one of the stickiest sources of inflation in the US, with prices for home and community-based care increasing more than three times the pace of overall inflation since January 2024. In many states, the cost of caring for children has outpaced even housing and healthcare costs.
For working parents, particularly mothers, the impact is devastating. Polls from the Century Foundation show that women are having a harder time finding good-quality jobs due to care responsibilities and unaffordable options. Families are trapped between impossible choices: stay home and lose income or work just to pay for care.
These elections demonstrate that the US's affordability crisis is indeed a care crisis. Voters across party lines are demanding solutions, and candidates who prioritize care as a foundational economic issue are winning.
Leaders like Mamdani, Sherrill, and Spanberger are showing that putting care at the center of politics is common sense. Investing in care supports both families and the economy, enabling parents to participate in the workforce, providing paid leave for workers and families, and ensuring access to home and community-based services for older adults and people with disabilities.
As states like New Mexico, Connecticut, Washington, Colorado, California, and Rhode Island continue to innovate in their approach to care policies and support, it's clear that a sustained public investment in care is essential. Raising wages for care workers, expanding affordable childcare options, and ensuring equitable access to care across different stages of life are crucial steps towards addressing the country's affordability crisis.