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Jennifer L.W. Fink's avatar

This part is so important & so often overlooked: "stay-at-home parents may have significant positive externalities besides contributing to the tax base." How we raise kids/care for our elderly & communities MATTERS - & does indeed have downstream economic effects that may be difficult to quantify. The time and effort I put into raising my 4 kids and helping them develop their character & potential allows them to contribute in positive ways, and I'm convinced that we, broadly, can do a better job of that in smaller settings (like families, where we know one another deeply & are deeply committed) than in large institutional settings. I am not saying daycare is evil or that parents should not work; I'm saying there's value in care that is deeply individual and committed.

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Jim Dalrymple II's avatar

Great piece. I remember reading that Oster piece and having my jaw on the floor the entire time. Frankly the argument seemed to be verging on bad faith, like she was looking for a econ 101 excuse to justify outcomes she really supported for social rather economic reasons (it was just such a bad argument). Either way though, I'm really glad you offered this analysis. Great read here.

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