Families Childcare & Early Education
Topic Childcare & Early Education

A growing body of evidence shows that investments in high-quality, affordable, and accessible childcare and learning are a key element of a healthy, growing U.S. economy. Research tells us that the ages zero to three are a critically important time for developing the wide range of skills necessary for future success. Equitable Growth is growing the evidence base for the demand side of the early education equation—what do families need and want for their children and themselves and what are the obstacles to access across the economic distribution—and the supply side of the equation—what does quality childcare look like, and how do we expand access to quality early care and learning jobs in a way that creates meaningful economic security for care workers?

Featured work

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Child care prices, inflation, and the end of federal pandemic-era aid in five charts

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What is social infrastructure, and how does it support economic growth in the United States?

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Factsheet: What the research says about the economics of the 2021 enhanced Child Tax Credit

FamiliesTax & Macroeconomics
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Advancing research and evidence on child care and U.S. economic growth

FamiliesInequality & Mobility
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The child care economy

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Factsheet: What the research says about the economics of early care and education

FamiliesInequality & Mobility

Explore Content in Childcare & Early Education207

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Nutrition, pregnancy, and long-run labor market outcomes

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The evolution of class-based gaps in young children’s home environments

Families
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Can text messages boost child literacy?

Families
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Learning from the variation in the effectiveness of Head Start

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Our future depends on early childhood investments

Families
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Is the variation in spending on children important?

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Reform summer vacation to boost U.S. economic competitiveness

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Job quality matters: How our future economic competitiveness hinges on the quality of parents’ jobs

FamiliesLabor
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