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Home > More care, more workers? Gauging the impact of child care access on labor force participation

More care, more workers? Gauging the impact of child care access on labor force participation [1]

Author: 
Reaves, J., Akaeze, H. O., Schlukebir, H. A., Miller, S. R., Akaeze, H. O., & Wu, J. H.-C.
Source: 
Social Sciences
Format: 
Article
Publication Date: 
23 Jul 2025
AVAILABILITY
Access online [2]

Abstract

This study investigates the critical link between child care accessibility and local labor force participation, addressing a gap in current research that often lacks local spatial granularity. While over half of the U.S. population resides in child care deserts, disproportionately affecting rural, low-income, and minority communities, the economic implications for local labor markets remain underexplored. Leveraging Michigan child care license data and Census tract-level demographic and employment characteristics, this research employs a spatial econometric approach to estimate the impact of geographic distance to child care facilities on labor supply using descriptive data. Our findings consistently demonstrate that increased distance to child care is significantly associated with reduced labor force participation. While female labor force participation is lower in areas with constrained access to child care, we also found that households with two parents are also less likely to have full labor force participation when access to child care is constrained. The cost-effective framework used here can be replicated to identify specific communities most impacted by child care-related employment disruptions. The analytical findings can be instrumental in targeting and prioritizing child care policy interventions.

Related link: 
New MSU study highlights how expanding child care access strengthens Michigan's workforce [3]
Region: 
United States [4]
Tags: 
accessibility [5]
labour force participation [6]
low-income [7]
women's labour force participation [8]
rural [9]

Source URL (modified on 14 Jan 2026):https://childcarecanada.org/documents/research-policy-practice/26/01/more-care-more-workers-gauging-impact-child-care-access

Links
[1] https://childcarecanada.org/documents/research-policy-practice/26/01/more-care-more-workers-gauging-impact-child-care-access [2] https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/14/8/458 [3] https://childcarecanada.org/documents/child-care-news/26/01/new-msu-study-highlights-how-expanding-child-care-access-strengthens [4] https://childcarecanada.org/taxonomy/term/7865 [5] https://childcarecanada.org/category/tags/accessiblity [6] https://childcarecanada.org/taxonomy/term/8923 [7] https://childcarecanada.org/category/tags/low-income [8] https://childcarecanada.org/category/tags/womens-labour-force-participation [9] https://childcarecanada.org/category/tags/rural