We are living through our nation’s first female-driven recession. Fueled by disappearing service-sector jobs and a lack of childcare options, the COVID-19 public health and economic crisis has triggered a nationwide “shecession,” the ripple effects of which are already threatening the workforce and could imperil the female future of work.
Women, especially women of color, are being ousted from the workforce, largely due to disappearing jobs in industries that may never recover. Without major investments in quality, national childcare and the female future of work, this exodus of women from the workplace could be permanent. Legislative leaders need to act quickly to make sure that women can survive — and thrive — in this shecession.
A major roadblock to progress is the failure of lawmakers to identify and act on women’s economic security needs. Women feared economic insecurity long before the COVID-19 pandemic.
RELATED: Stephanie Ruhle: 5 ways to get ahead while job-searching during the pandemic
YWCA USA – one of the oldest and largest women’s organizations in the country – conducted and released the YWomenVote 2020 survey prior to the pandemic. What did we find out? Women. Are. Worried.
Across age, income levels, racial identities and party lines, women expressed deep concerns about access to high-quality and affordable childcare, well-paying jobs with benefits, pay equity and fair workplaces.
Even before COVID-19, women of color and young women felt these concerns immensely. And now, they are the ones feeling the deepest economic pain. The majority of women of color have lost their hours, experienced a pay cut, or faced unemployment. Even women on the frontlines, those who arguably have the best job security, are being forced to leave their jobs due to the lack of available childcare.
So what should lawmakers do? Listen! Women are 51 percent of the population. Single or partnered, we are caregivers and breadwinners. Our needs are America’s needs. The failures to address the concerns of women at a national and local level, despite overwhelming support, indicate that we simply are not being heard.
Women have been sounding the alarm about our broken childcare system for years. The pandemic has made two things very clear: childcare is not just a “women’s issue,” and our nation’s childcare system is failing everyone — parents, children, childcare workers and the American economy.
Access to childcare is a problem regardless of income. Families with incomes over $100,000 and less than $40,000 are equally likely to report inadequate childcare options. In 2019, half of working families reported having difficulty finding suitable childcare, citing cost availability and quality as the primary obstacles. The childcare crisis is hurting American workers, businesses and our economy; the cost of lost earnings, revenue, and productivity resulting from inadequate childcare totals about $57 billion per year.
The sector itself is ripe for overhaul, too. Childcare workers are among the lowest paid in the American workforce. This low-wage sector is 96 percent female, and women of color are disproportionately represented.
Federal lawmakers must invest in a high-quality childcare system that addresses availability, cost, quality and equity to aid the nation’s COVID-19 recovery and support long-term economic resiliency. This childcare system must compensate childcare workers fairly, as they are the backbone of the economy.









