Why the US doesn’t have universal child care (anymore) - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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"In war towns all over the United States
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women are called upon to leave their homes and take jobs."
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During World War II, nearly 1 in 3 American men went off to war.
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And women were expected to take their place at work.
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"They discovered that factory work is usually no more difficult than house work."
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"Isn't this pretty hot for you?"
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"Well I hear it gets kind of hot around a kitchen stove, too."
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But the problem was...
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who was going to watch Rosie the Riveter’s kids?
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“When married women with small children have to take jobs
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everything possible will be done to provide day-care for the children.”
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For 50 cents a day, which would be about $8 now
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mothers could leave their kids at a government-funded day care center.
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Lunch was included.
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America actually set up universal child care for working mothers.
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Canada and other countries did too.
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Around half a million American children attended these centers.
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But when the war ended...
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"Joy is unconfined."
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...so did the daycare.
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Families protested, calling for the centers to be permanent.
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But the federal funding stopped in 1946.
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And so the US missed that start
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to begin a climb towards other child care policies.
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Other countries didn’t.
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Canada had the same protests.
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And some provinces decided to keep their centers open.
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That decision started them down a path
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where it was easy to implement other government-run policies.
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So, how did the US end up here?
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Here are some of the richest countries in the world.
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And here’s when each of them established a paid maternity leave policy.
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And a universal child care policy.
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And let’s throw in paid paternity leave for good measure.
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In France, they’ve actually had some form of universal child care since the 1800s.
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But formalized the system in 1945.
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In Sweden, considered to have one of the best systems in the world,
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they were the first ones to guarantee paid paternity leave.
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And they’ve provided full child care for all children since 1985.
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You’ll notice the US has none of these policies.
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Technically there is a 12-week maternity leave policy.
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It’s just not paid.
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That’s up to your employer.
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And a few states offer preschool and there are some child care programs
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but they’re mostly for low-income families and far from universal.
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Child care in the US right now is very fragmented
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There are different programs that function for different purposes
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and often work against each other.
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Take a closer look at this chart.
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After WWII was a popular time for these child care policies
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but so was the 70s.
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The early 70s were a time for women’s rights.
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Equal employment laws had just passed.
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Divorce laws were loosened.
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And many countries established universal child care policies.
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It almost happened in the US, too.
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Almost.
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What happened in 1971 is that
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there was obviously a sense that we needed to do something about child care.
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And Congress actually acted.
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Both the House and Senate passed the Comprehensive Child Development Act.
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This was a really extraordinary bill
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because it would have provided a universal child care.
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It would not have been stigmatized in the same way
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that welfare programs would have been.
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It would have been available to a much wider group of families.
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But then President Richard Nixon vetoed it.
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No one expected the veto.
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It was a terrible shock.
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His veto message said that this is going to create communal child care rearing.
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It would Sovietize the American family.
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That language was a response to criticism that he was going soft on communism
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like by visiting China.
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But really...
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The right wing began to see this
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as an encroachment because it could be used
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potentially by white, middle-class families
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in order to support women leaving the home and going out into the workforce.
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They're not supposed to be working.
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We do want to make, you know poor, black, and brown indigenous mothers
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like those are the non-deserving kinds of mothers that shouldn't be on welfare.
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They should be working.
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Conservative Phyllis Schlafly led that opposition.
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"Women whose husbands have left them or divorced them or whatever, have a very hard time."
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"But when you look at these wives who
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simply want a standard of living higher than their husband is producing
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crying around that they want somebody else to pay for their daycare."
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They were organizing against child care because it would take mothers out of the home.
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Just as the European countries were starting their child care systems
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we were shutting the door.
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The day after Nixon vetoes the CDA
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he signed into law a bill that created child care tax deductions
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for middle class and affluent families.
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This creates a two tiered system,
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on one hand, you have these tax supports.
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And then on the other hand, you get these much more stigmatized
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direct supports for only low-income families.
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Meanwhile these countries were able to follow a path from one universal policy to another.
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Experts call this “path dependency.”
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So for these countries, once they established one universal policy
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creating others was fairly straightforward.
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Where in the US, it’s been easier to design policies within the parameters
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of the existing income-based programs
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or tax breaks that Nixon founded.
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He set a path where
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any kind of federal child care policy would be as underfunded, stigmatized, as possible.
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It's a system that reinforces and deepens inequalities of race, gender, and class.
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It doesn't end up helping so many of our families.
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But just because we’re on that path doesn’t mean we can’t change.
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Just look at the United Kingdom.
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From a birds eye view these, countries are following very similar paths.
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Neither continued the day care centers after WWII.
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Both had attempted child care policy in the 70s.
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The UK’s failed attempt was actually led by conservative Margaret Thatcher.
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But in the 90s, the UK actually shifted and established a universal pre-k program.
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So, what changed?
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It's framed as education, not welfare.
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So those questions of deservingness
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aren't applicable in the same way because it's education for all children.
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It's part-time, it's not as generous, but I think that it is
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an example of how you can readjust your priorities
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and change direction.
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The US had universal child care once.
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And almost did again.
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But with policy, it’s never really game over.