It costs an average of $10,000 a year for childcare in the U.S. – a price that’s already unaffordable for many Americans. And it turns out, the problem could get worse for families in the months to come.
On Sept. 30, the emergency childcare funding Congress allocated during the pandemic, which included $24 billion in childcare stabilization grants, is set to expire.
Over the past two years, that money was used by childcare providers to increase employees’ salaries, cover expenses like rent and utilities, and to buy personal protective equipment.
“The ramifications could be devastating,” said ForbesWomen editor Maggie McGrath on Thursday’s “Morning Joe.”
If the funding expires, approximately 70,000 childcare programs are expected to close, according to a report by the Century Foundation. As a result, 3.2 million children could lose their care and 232,000 child care jobs will be lost.
“It’s worth noting that even if all those facilities don’t close, there will be kids who will lose their spots because tuition will go up because of the lost funding, and it will become even more unaffordable,” said McGrath.
In addition, states will lose a projected $10.6 billion in revenue and parents could lose up to $9 billion in annual earnings.
Working moms, many of whom returned to work in record numbers since the Covid-19 pandemic, could also have some tough choices on the horizon if the funding expires, said Huma Abedin, an MSNBC contributor and vice-chair of Forbes and Know Your Value’s 30/50 summit.









