Most macro risks make headlines. The biggest one most investors ignore is the cost of a daycare bill.
A Bipartisan Policy Center analysis published in October estimates that gaps in U.S. childcare access could cost the economy $216 billion to $329 billion over the next 10 years. The losses come from reduced productivity, workforce exits, and forgone tax revenue.
Where the number comes from
The BPC's Child Care Gaps Assessment tracks where formal childcare supply falls short of demand at the county level. About 4.2 million children currently lack access to formal care, and each gap is estimated to cost $51,688 to $78,689 over a decade.
When parents - mostly mothers - reduce hours or leave the workforce because of care problems, the ripple hits households first, then businesses, then tax bases. The compounding effect over 10 years is how the number gets so large.
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The business case for fixing it
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which now runs a national push for the expanded Section 45F employer childcare tax credit, points to a $63 billion number from the St. Louis Fed. That's what the childcare sector contributes to U.S. GDP today - about 0.3% of total output.
States lose around $1 billion in economic activity each year because of childcare breakdowns, the Chamber estimates. A 2024 Boston Consulting Group study cited by the BPC found employers who fund childcare benefits saw up to 425% returns.
What to Watch
Section 45F's expansion took effect this year, with higher credit caps and the ability for small businesses to pool resources as the new pieces.
The federal Saver's Match starting 2027 is another piece of the response. None of these alone closes a $329 billion gap, but together they sketch the policy direction - and the kind of structural macro signal smart money tends to spot early.
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