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Care for All: Key Lessons for Child Advocates from the Broader $648 Billion Care Economy

Caring Across Generations/Facebook

Early Learning Nation often focuses on child care and early education, which comprise about one-fifth of the . Yet care doesn鈥檛 happen in a vacuum or only during one period of life. As we age, we need care, and 聽disabled people need long-term supports and services. This election season is a helpful time to take a step back and look at the whole care picture.

Maintaining a holistic view of care avoids characterizing any one type as more or less worthy of public investment so we can forgo arguments about whether seniors or young children are more deserving; the care sector is stronger united than divided.

Julie Kashen at a press conference

I spoke to Julie Kashen (senior fellow and director for women’s economic justice at聽), Anna Shireen Wadia (executive director of ) and Robert Espinoza (CEO of ) to learn more about other parts of the care sector and what child care advocates should understand.

These conversations took place before Vice President Kamala Harris became the presumptive Democratic nominee for President and before she named Minnesota governor Tim Walz as her running mate, but Kashen, Wadia and Espinoza鈥檚 insights couldn鈥檛 be more relevant at this moment. As Jonathan Cohn has , Harris鈥檚 personal and political experience indicates firm commitments to child care, paid leave and related issues. Walz has presided over historic public investments in care.

As Kashen observes, the care workforce is mostly female and disproportionately women of color. Low pay and few benefits and protections are the norm. 鈥淚t’s a challenging sector,鈥 she admits, 鈥渂ut at the same time, many people doing this work really love the work of care and find it’s incredibly rewarding.鈥

Wadia says care is distinct from other forms of work because of 鈥渢he intense and intimate relationship between consumers of care and the workers they are entrusting to care for their loved ones.鈥 Don鈥檛 forget that while these are economic issues, they aren鈥檛 just economic.

Compensation: The Bottom Line

Anna Wadia and family

Care work makes all other work possible. Unless this challenging, skilled labor pays a living wage, caregivers will continue to defect to retail and customer service. Wadia underscores the irony: 鈥淚n some ways, this is the most important work that can be done in our society, and yet it is among the worst compensated work.鈥

Kashen offers a grim if undeniable historical perspective. 鈥淐aregiving has long been undervalued,鈥 she maintains. 鈥淵ou can look back to the origins of chattel slavery that forced Black women to nurse and care for the children of white landowners, to the detriment of their own children.鈥 Women of every race and ethnic background have traditionally been the default caregivers for children, disabled loved ones and aging relatives. This free domestic labor has tended to make care undervalued and invisible 鈥 cultural norms that need to be challenged forcefully if things are going to change.

鈥淭he better you’re able to compensate caregivers,鈥 Kashen states, 鈥渢he more likely they’re not going to be economically insecure and stressed, so they can be more present with the people they’re caring for.鈥

While the paycheck is paramount, other factors count, such as respect, predictable hours and a pathway for advancement. Without a clear career ladder, Wadia says, 鈥淢oving up generally means moving out.鈥 Early educators apply for jobs in K-12 education, and those caring for seniors seek qualification for nursing and other health care professions. Experts are coming up with ways for these providers to gain relevant skills and credentials that retain them in the sector if that鈥檚 where their passion lies.

Espinoza foresees technology altering the economics of care, making the job more efficient and supporting workers鈥攚ithout replacing them. He cautions, 鈥淲e’ll also need strong policies to ensure tech innovators and businesses are drawing on workers’ expertise to inform this technology and safeguards to prevent unnecessary worker displacement.鈥 Family supports, including child care for care workers as well as public transportation and a more equitable system of benefits, would also make the sector more sustainable.

Advocacy: Caring Out Loud

around the time her book, Parent Nation, came out, surgeon and advocate Dana Suskind described the gains for U.S. seniors made possible by the AARP. The organization pushed for the Older Americans Act of 1965, and since then has secured prescription-drug benefits and protection of Social Security, among other measures. Calling for a 鈥淣ational Association of Parents and Caregivers,鈥 she declares, 鈥淲e have the economic case, and the general consensus, that parents need more support. What we lack is political clout. Older Americans galvanized because there was finally someone looking out for them, not the other way around. Parents need a similar revolution.鈥

Some of this work is already taking place, though not on anything like AARP scale. ( also packs a wallop.) Wadia sees potential in advocating for significant public investment. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the only way that we are going to have quality, affordable and accessible care, whether for children or older people or people with disabilities and decent jobs for care workers,鈥 she says.

Kashen similarly recognizes the power of workers and advocates joining forces across the care continuum and alongside the people whose jobs are only possible thanks to the care sector: 鈥淏ringing together the consumers of care with the providers of care,鈥 she says, 鈥測ou have a much stronger conversation, especially with , which is now at the center of the Care Can鈥檛 Wait movement. We’re all part of the same ecosystem, and we all need the same things.鈥 , the domestic employers network, is another piece of the advocacy puzzle, she says.

鈥淐are is such a powerful mobilizing and unifying set of issues,鈥 Wadia explains, 鈥渂ecause people experience care crises and care responsibilities across income and across race. It has become a unifying issue.鈥

Organizing: Union-Strong Care

One key difference between child care and elder care can be found in the power of unions. Nursing home workers participate in unions 鈥 chiefly, and 鈥 at greater rates than their counterparts in child care centers, family care and other settings. Membership, as they say, has its privileges, including job security and health benefits.

Although child care workers are a long way from catching up, they are beginning to catch on () 鈥 and no wonder. As the , 鈥淗igh unionization levels are associated with positive outcomes across multiple indicators of economic, personal and democratic well-being.鈥

For Kashen, the care sector as a whole advances with policies supportive of organizing and bargaining, especially where providers have government grants or contracts, as opposed to subsidies that go to individual families.

Thanks to the efforts of SEIU and the , those who care for seniors and disabled people in their homes have gained more traction with organizing. The home, Wadia notes, is a very different workplace setting. 鈥淚t leads to a lot of challenges for organizing because people are atomized. Employers of home care workers will say, 鈥榊ou feel like family to me鈥欌攚hich is often very positive, but it also means that the consumers or the employers don’t necessarily see these as real jobs or see themselves as employers.鈥

Immigration: Getting the Care Job Done

Robert Espinoza at a UnidosUS event

, immigrants constitute at least 27% of workers in 鈥渄irect care鈥 鈥 which covers working with seniors and people with disabilities 鈥 while a found that 18% of early child care workers were born outside the U.S. (compared to ). The percentages may be even greater, Espinoza notes, referring to undocumented home care and child workers in the so-called gray market, but clearly, immigrants make up a significant part of the care workforce, and solutions to chronic problems aren鈥檛 viable unless they make sense for this subsection of the labor market.

Espinoza, who formerly served as executive vice president of policy at PHI, says that as the son of a Mexican immigrant, he has a personal interest in 鈥渋magining sound and humane policies that support immigrants and support our country’s economy.鈥 He acknowledges that more work needs to be done to help a considerable portion of the American public see the value in federal and state policies that make it easier for even more immigrants to participate in the care sector. 鈥 might be a solution worth exploring.

In addition to immigrants, Espinoza says older workers and Generation Z men might be engaged to address shortages.

The pandemic made caregivers more visible鈥攖heir value to families and the gaps and inequities that have persisted for decades. Espinoza points to labor shortages and other trends across the U.S. labor landscape that are buffeting the care sector. 鈥淎 large percentage of workers are retiring and reducing their hours, and have done so even more since the end of the pandemic,鈥 he says. Looking at new pipelines of people to take these jobs should be a priority.

The big takeaway from these three experts? A thriving, fair economy depends on a robust, equitable care sector 鈥 across lifespans and around the country.

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 社区黑料. Learn more here.

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