Study Finds Sharp Inequalities Persist for Child-Care
in Massachusetts
Despite spending more per capita on preschool programs than any other
state, Massachusetts has 40 percent fewer preschools for children in poor
neighborhoods compared to wealthier communities, according to a study
released today by researchers at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
The Harvard study is the first examination of child-care availability
in middle class and low-income neighborhoods in Massachusetts, particularly
those with high concentrations of welfare recipients and single mothers.
"The fact that poor families have unequal access to child-care must
be addressed by policymakers who advocate moving welfare recipients into
the workforce," said Bruce Fuller, co-author of the study and an
associate professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. "Two
thirds of all welfare recipients have pre-school aged children. If just
a fraction of welfare parents go to work, the immense demand for preschooling
in the inner-city will bring down an already fragile system."
Fuller said that sending welfare recipients to work without increasing
child-care funding has even worse ramifications at the national level.
"Massachusetts has the nation's best scenario for handling the surge
in demand for child-care that welfare-to-work would create," Fuller
said. "Despite Massachusetts' progressive child-care policies, the
number of preschool spaces available to poor families is almost one-third
below that found in affluent suburban communities. The gap is even wider--40
percent--when looking at communities with the highest proportion
of welfare recipients."
Fuller and co-author Xiaoyan Liang, a graduate student at Harvard, found
that child-care programs in Massachusetts neighborhoods where welfare
recipients reside have 7 child-care programs per 1,000 children aged 3-5,
compared to 12 programs per 1,000 in upper middle-class and affluent communities.
The gap in available child-care organizations translates into an equal
gap in available slots for childen.
Massachusetts has 105,000 households who receive Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC), almost two thirds of whom have at least one
pre-school-age child. "The Commonwealth's current welfare reform
proposal seeks to move 18,000 of these recipients off of AFDC," Fuller
said. "Yet it makes no accomodation for the 45 percent jump in child-care
slots required to care for the children whose parents would go to work.
Attempts to focus welfare reform on families with school-age children
will also run up against shortages of after-school care, another service
that is inequitably distributed."
Single Parents Underserved
The study also examined child-care availability in neighborhoods with
high concentrations of single mothers, independent of family income. The
study showed working poor and even middle-class single parents face unequal
access to preschool services. Neighborhoods with high concentrations of
single parents possess almost 50 percent fewer child-care spaces compared
to affluent communities with fewer single parents.
National Implications
The study was released along with previously available national data
that, when taken together, have important implications for current policy
debates over welfare reform. Families in Massachusetts benefit from a
much greater supply of child-care options than the rest of the nation.
In Massachusetts, communities with a majority of middle-income families
have 10.3 child-care centers operating compared with the nationwide county
average of 5.7 centers. The disparities in child-care supply across rich
and poor communities are not as stark in Massachusetts as they are nationally,
Fuller said, because national and state child-care subsidies in the Commonwealth
have been targeted to increase the supply in poor neighborhoods.
"Child-care inequities will worsen if Washington gives states unregulated
block grants, a move requested by many of the nation's governors,"
Fuller said. "Federal efforts to equalize child-care access have
helped poor women and their children, although more remains to be done.
Without the political muscle of federal regulation, limited child-care
in inner cities and rural areas will remain woefully inadequate. Less
affluent states simply cannot afford, or lack the political will, to raise
and equalize the supply of child-care."
Additional Findings
The study also found:
- Parents' education levels are more influential in sparking demand
for and supply of child-care places than is family income. Per capita
preschool supply is fully 50 percent greater in neighborhoods with highly
educated parents, relative to communities dominated by poorly educated
families.
- Massachusetts neighborhoods with high proportions of non-English
speaking Latino families have the lowest preschool supply of any ethnic
group. This may stem from their lower family demand or from less attention
by government to the child-care needs of Latino households.
Background on the Study
The study is the second part of a report, Can Poor Families Find Child-Care?
Persisting Inequality Nationwide and in Massachusetts, which examines
the availability of child-care nationwide and in Massachusetts. The Massachusetts
data was drawn from 368 communities defined by zip code boundaries within
the Commonwealth. The national examination, using data from 100 randomly
selected counties in 36 states, was first released in 1993. The entire
report will be published this summer by The American Educational Research
Association in Washington, D.C.
The study was supported by The Spencer Foundation. The authors, Bruce
Fuller, associate professor, and Xiaoyan Liang, a doctoral student, are
both at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. The pair used data collected
in 1994 by the Massachusetts Office for Children from all licensed or
registered centers in the state by zip code. Researchers matched 1990
census information by zip code with mean household income, welfare participation,
adult education levels, and ethnicity. Fuller is a co-director of the
Child-Care and Family Policy Project at the Harvard Graduate School of
Education.
For More Information
Contact Ariadne Valsamis at 617-495-0740