Sunday, April 19, 2015

Financial Aid Starts Early

You may have heard the jokes – they go all of the way back to the Murphy Brown television series in the early 1990s – about how competitive preschools are, and how choosing the wrong one could start a fall of dominoes that will prevent your child from getting into the right grade school, middle school, high school, college and graduate school. Exactly how many people actually believe in such a sequence is unclear, but there are still news stories every few years about preschool programs that cost as much in tuition as most public universities, and the massive competition that occurs each year to get into the best. An offshoot of these jokes involves parents taking out student loans on behalf of children who are not yet able to dress themselves, or in the case of less wealthy families, seeking financial aid in order to achieve the same results. Unfortunately, this may be less of a joke than you’d think…

According to a story that ran last week in the New York Times, the problem with preschool is that it isn’t affordable for a very large range of families, especially in the case of single parents who also need after-school daycare. The example given is in Chicago, where even the public school system’s Preschool program runs in excess of $13,000 per year – over a thousand dollars per child per month – and private programs range upwards from there. There are low-income programs like Head Start, for families that qualify, but most people living above the poverty line can’t get their children into those programs, which only leaves student loans, personal loans, and the aforementioned financial aid programs. Programs which, it turns out, also leave large numbers of parents and their children out in the cold…

Now, we should probably acknowledge that the Daycare issue isn’t a new concept. For at least the last twenty years, and possibly more like fifty, many working-class families have had to decide between working a second (or third) job in order to pay for daycare, or just having one parent quit their jobs and stay home with the children. Indeed, if your monthly take-home pay is $1,000, and cost for childcare is going to be $1,120 per month, you probably couldn’t afford to go back to work if you wanted to. A single parent does not have that option in the first place, of course, and once we start considering child support and spousal support issues the whole matter of who actually qualifies for financial aid becomes even more complicated. The real question is what to do about it…

Greater funding for financial aid programs would seem to be one obvious approach, except for the fact that all of the existing financial aid systems are overtaxed, not just the ones available to preschool students – and the fact that funding for public education is already in crisis. As appealing as the idea of pumping additional money into local school districts in an attempt to increase the number of places available in public preschool facilities might be, it does not appear that throwing additional resources into traditional methods is going to help. The question that comes to my mind is whether there might be a private-sector approach that would help…

We have already seen examples of companies offering subsidized preschool programs as a benefit for their employees – offering the services at cost makes them effectively resource-neutral on the balance sheet, while at the same time helping to retain valued employees and raising morale. There can even be an operational efficiency improvement, in that employees who have children in daycare in the same building in which they work do not have to leave the premises and travel across town in order to look in on their children. Public support for such programs could be very cost-effective, since every child placed in private or corporate daycare would be one less individual competing for finite resources in public schools or from financial aid programs. But there might be an even more direct approach to the problem…

As of the last time I checked, there was no specific program available to fund new daycare businesses – but there is no reason that the Federal government couldn’t establish one, either through the Small Business Administration (SBA) directly or through the entrepreneurship programs that all of the Federal agencies are required to support. By doing so, they would be able to relieve pressure on both the financial aid system and the public daycare system, not to mention creating jobs for all of the caregivers who would then be employed by the private-sector daycare centers. You would need additional social services personnel to regulate such businesses, and some additional infrastructure to administrate the SBA programs, but you would also be creating profit-making businesses and gainfully-employed citizens, all of who would (in theory) also contribute to the tax base and put additional funds into the local economy…

I’m not saying any of this would be easy. On the contrary, any such program would require a great deal of resources to start and to run, as well as considerable intestinal fortitude on the part of the public officials that launched it. But at least we could get rid of some of these competitive preschool jokes…

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