Policy Briefing: New Research Looks Toward a Childcare Inclusive Poverty Measure
Posted by Center on Poverty and Social Policy on June 9, 2026
Childcare is a major need for all families with children in the United States, yet the Census Bureau’s Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM) only accounts for parents’ childcare needs by treating childcare expenses as a nondiscretionary expense for parents who work in the labor market. In reality, all families with children have a need for childcare. In this working paper, we attempt to create a “Childcare Inclusive” poverty measure, following recommendations put forward by a 2023 National Academies of Sciences report on improving the SPM. We identify a number of conceptual and empirical issues that would need to be overcome before instituting a fully childcare inclusive poverty measure. Our goal in the creation and evaluation of such a measure is to help inform the Census’ eventual consideration of a childcare inclusive measure going forward. A childcare inclusive measure, if properly constructed, would better illuminate the role that childcare subsidies like childcare vouchers and Head Start play in reducing child and family poverty.
More in "New Resources"
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