Policy Lessons on Access to and Uptake of Childcare Services

Unpaid care work and the lack of access to affordable childcare constitute key barriers to women’s participation in labor markets. The International Labour Organization estimates that, in 2018, 647 million working-age adults were hindered from entering the workforce due to family responsibilities—94 percent of whom were women. In that year, women’s unpaid care work amounted to three-quarters of total unpaid care work, with an estimated value of 9 percent of global GDP. A pilot study by the MNA GIL in Egypt finds that, on average, mothers spent 11 hours per day on childcare and seven hours per day doing household chores. The EAP GIL reviewed causal evidence on the effects of childcare interventions on maternal labor market engagement in low and middle-income countries and found positive impacts for 21 out of the 22 studies considered.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Halim, Daniel, Ubfal, Diego, Wangchuk, Rigzom
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-02-15T15:01:37Z
Subjects:CHILDCARE, AFFORDABILITY, WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT, FATHER'S ENGAGEMENT, GENDER INNOVATION LAB,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099539501252325473/IDU05fbc34890975a04f5f0ae1f05d7bc6d6232e
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/39429
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Summary:Unpaid care work and the lack of access to affordable childcare constitute key barriers to women’s participation in labor markets. The International Labour Organization estimates that, in 2018, 647 million working-age adults were hindered from entering the workforce due to family responsibilities—94 percent of whom were women. In that year, women’s unpaid care work amounted to three-quarters of total unpaid care work, with an estimated value of 9 percent of global GDP. A pilot study by the MNA GIL in Egypt finds that, on average, mothers spent 11 hours per day on childcare and seven hours per day doing household chores. The EAP GIL reviewed causal evidence on the effects of childcare interventions on maternal labor market engagement in low and middle-income countries and found positive impacts for 21 out of the 22 studies considered.