legitster a day ago

A lot of the "regulations" baked into childcare aren't really going to move the needle - the inefficiencies are baked into the model. I don't care how lax your state is, you're not going to run a successful childcare center with 100 kids and 1 caretaker. So the cost of childcare is always going to be linked strongly to median prevailing wages.

While I think Baumol may have something to say here, I think we should listen to Henry George a bit more. The lion's share of overhead for a daycare goes towards its real estate costs. Similarly, it's a growing share of cost of living for both the workers and the customers. And as Henry George pointed out, the cost of housing goes up without creating economic value for anyone.

  • J_Shelby_J 21 hours ago

    The knock on effect of high housing costs is driving force behind price increases and declining quality of service everywhere.

    It’s an absurd situation here in California, where we are some of the richest people in history, but because the cost of housing so high, the price of everything is driven to the breaking point… meanwhile, the important jobs required for a nicely ran country are too expensive to afford and so our transit, healthcare, service industry, etc is awful.

  • jjav 10 hours ago

    > The lion's share of overhead for a daycare goes towards its real estate costs.

    Not really. Salaries are by far the highest cost.

    • BoiledCabbage 5 hours ago

      And the largest part of those salaries is again used to pay for housing.

      Roughly one thirds of American incomes go to cover housing. Cheaper housing means lower wage demands.

  • bryanlarsen 17 hours ago

    Daycare is expensive even when located in places where they get free or heavily subsidized rent, like church basements.

  • lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 16 hours ago

    > the cost of housing goes up without creating economic value for anyone

    This is kinda wrong. It does create value for the people who are loaning out the money that the working class uses to purchase the houses. Of course, in this context that value goes straight to the hands of bankers and never leaves but it's worth noting that this situation that the working class hates happens to be rather beneficial to the capital class.

  • cced 10 hours ago

    > cost of housing goes up without creating economic value for anyone

    The banks capture that in interest payments.

secabeen 21 hours ago

Another important factor in many states is the drive towards living wages across the board. For decades, child care (and probably pet care) was done by low-status immigrants and women, often at wages not sufficient to live alone or raise a family on. In more recent years, we've pushed up minimum wages and allowed not just white men to seek and obtain jobs that do pay more. It's overall good that we shrunk the under-classes compared to 100 years ago, but that does mean that if your business model depends on taking advantage of low-status people, it's not sustainable anymore, and you have to raise prices.

8200_unit 21 hours ago

We've lost the fundamental stability of a time when one income could comfortably sustain a family. There has been a systemic shift that undermines family well-being.

  • csa 21 hours ago

    > We've lost the fundamental stability of a time when one income could comfortably sustain a family. There has been a systemic shift that undermines family well-being.

    I used to agree with you.

    I currently believe that period of time (mid-20th century, esp. in the US) was a historical anomaly set up by a fairly unique set of circumstances, and we’re just on a long and slow path to reverting back to equilibrium/norm now.

    I hope I’m wrong.

    • BoiledCabbage 5 hours ago

      > I currently believe that period of time (mid-20th century, esp. in the US) was a historical anomaly set up by a fairly unique set of circumstances

      It was a period of high taxation on the highest incomes, large social welfare programs and by relative terms fairly low income inequality.

      Finally productivity gains benefitted the labor class and not just the capital class.

      That all halted in the 70s and 80s.

      • e40 an hour ago

        This. And this high taxation and middle class prosperity was the fuel that drove those who paid higher taxes to give us all the system we see today. Trump is not the cause, he’s the result.

  • ponector 17 hours ago

    I'm quite sure if you spend money on the same goods like during that day - you can sustain a family. Small house with asbestos, little amount of home appliances, basic small car, no food delivery, no AC etc.

    • lozenge 33 minutes ago

      This is an outdated view.

      The essential costs - housing, healthcare and education - have far outpaced inflation while the cost of food and appliances has not. How can a single income compete in buying from the limited supply of houses against dual incomes?

    • bombcar 9 hours ago

      I know a decent number of single income families and they even have A/C!

      You do have to intentionally budget but you can raise five+ kids on a single salary if you want to.

  • robertjpayne 10 hours ago

    The primary cause of population decline has nothing to do with incomes. You see high income earners having a smaller number of children.

    It's because women frankly have better options than motherhood and what stay at home parenting entails.

    • pempem 5 hours ago

      I just had this conversation with a friend today.

      Yes - given a small number of rights that frankly we should have always had - women have found all kinds of representation in education, salaries and diverse paths in life. Paths not previously open to us and pursued at tremendously high cost.

      But population decline frankly is occurring because society is uninterested in changing its relationship with child bearing and child rearing. Men have limited interested in stepping up, women are doing work at home, work at work, work in society. Corporations have less interested in flexibility where women are near continuously penalized or held back. Even in a "progressive" presidency there were more CEOs named John than women CEOs. There's disinterest even when the next generation of workers is on the line and the government...well they are actively moving to unwind the rights we've won.

  • lotsofpulp 21 hours ago

    That stability existed due to half of the population (women) not having the option to attain high paying jobs.

    • e40 an hour ago

      Let’s now t forget about the large population of black Americans who were left out, too.

    • 8200_unit 20 hours ago

      While it's true that women's professional opportunities were limited in the past, I disagree that this was the sole or even primary reason for single-income stability. My grandparents' generation, for example, often saw one parent (usually the father) working a manufacturing or union job that paid enough to cover a mortgage, raise several children, and afford basics, even with the mother not working outside the home. The purchasing power of those wages was simply far greater.

    • clove 20 hours ago

      Now they don't have the option to be housewives unless they actively seek out a rich husband. Who benefits? (There is only one correct answer):

      1. Families. 2. Women. 3. Corporations.

      • BobaFloutist 18 hours ago

        Not having the option of being a housewife is a low cost for having the option to be literally anything but a housewife.

      • lotsofpulp 20 hours ago

        Women who wanted financial freedom so that they have negotiating power benefited.

    • Tadpole9181 11 hours ago

      The workforce saw an explosion of productivity, and women added upwards of 100% more members of the workforce.

      The problem is that all of that wealth went to the billionaires and the rest of us got the bones in the scrap pile. Now we can't even raise our children because we need to work, but we cannot even not raise our children because it costs more than we make.

fsckboy 21 hours ago

the Baumol effect isn't an effect, it just describes a narrow case of the Substitution Effect. Price of beef goes up, you substitute pork and chicken, and those prices go up. You may think of yourself as a Computer Programmer but if Ditchdiggers get paid 3x as much in your area, you'd put Ditch Digging on your resume. To get you to program computers again, they'd have to pay you more.

goda90 a day ago

> Many explanations have been offered for rising child care costs. The Institute for Family Studies, for example, shows that prices rise with regulations like “group sizes, child-to-staff ratios, required annual training hours, and minimum educational requirements for teachers and center directors.” I don’t deny that regulation raises prices—places with more regulation have higher costs—but I don’t think that explains the slow, steady price increase over time. As with health care and education, the better explanation is the Baumol effect, as I argued in my book (with Helland) Why Are the Prices So Damn High?

While I agree regulation probably doesn't explain the whole price increase, I wonder if governments can do a better job preventing regulation from causing price increases without cutting corners on the regulation itself. Subsidize training for example. Make the child-staff ratios and group sizes a more dynamic factor based on age and needs. Maybe set aside funds to subsidize targeted special needs child care so the kids with fewer needs can be cared for more cheaply(I imagine this is controversial just like schools having separate special needs classes was).

Of course there's the catch all approach of adding childcare to the public schools budget and rolling the cost into taxes.

  • bglazer a day ago

    The article makes very clear that costs are rising for "pet day care" just as quickly as for real day care for children. This can not be explained by regulation, as pet day care is far far less regulated compared to daycare for children.

  • lantry 21 hours ago

    > Subsidize training for example

    This just spreads the cost across all taxpayers, instead of just the people consuming the service. Not to say that's a bad thing, just saying that it's not really "reducing the cost of regulation".

    > Make the child-staff ratios and group sizes a more dynamic factor based on age and needs.

    At least in my state, this is already the case. for infants, 1 adult per 6 children; increasing the ratio as they get older, up to 1 adult for 18 children when they're 4.

    I don't think you're wrong that there are ways to reduce the burden of regulation, but I think we overestimate how much "low hanging fruit" there really is here. The common-sense, obvious, uncontroversial solutions are usually already in place

    • danaris an hour ago

      > This just spreads the cost across all taxpayers, instead of just the people consuming the service.

      Yes—and then we can (in theory—obviously not going to happen in the current political climate) shift the bulk of that cost onto the taxpayers who can most afford to subsidize it, and away from the people who are just getting by. Who are, not entirely coincidentally, also the people most likely to be in need of childcare services.

    • squigz 6 hours ago

      1 adult per 18 4-year old children seems... hectic.

egypturnash 21 hours ago

I wonder how much of the need for both of these industries would vanish if more families had one stay-at-home parent.

  • showerst 21 hours ago

    We send our daughter to a daycare that has a number of families so wealthy that one or both parents wouldn’t have to work. They still do daycare because many people want careers, and/or because they think the socialization and environment diversity is good for their kids.

    • bombcar 9 hours ago

      Obviously you’re not going to meet the families that don’t use daycare … at daycare.

ponector 14 hours ago

Daycare and basically all child non-entertainment services (health and education) should be heavily subsidized. It's a new taxpayer, all money will be repaid tenfold.

  • bombcar 9 hours ago

    Apparently much cheaper to simply import a fully grown taxpayer instead.

    • akimbostrawman 7 hours ago

      Infinite money glitch with no downside??? Simply never stop importing people I'm sure there won't be any issues at all!

      • donjoe0 3 hours ago

        Like running out of unskilled people to import, especially in these times of rapid emancipation of countries that used to be forcefully held down in an undeveloped state so they could be used precisely as reservoirs of natural resources and cheap labor, to be tapped at will. Witness the collapse of 200 years of "economic theory" in the White Racist West that was basically just some shiny wrapping over the doctrine of "well we will just rob all those other countries that can't defend themselves".

skeezyboy 21 hours ago

wage increases not matching price increases... ah yes the american dream. simply put, youre poor, youre country has conned you, people live in better conditions all over the world.

  • soulofmischief 21 hours ago

    Who exactly is this comment directed towards? Americans can't help the fact that they were born in America. Also, you meant to say "your" and did not add an apostrophe to your contractions.

    • skeezyboy 2 hours ago

      umm, americans? its true though. how can there be so many people struggling financially in the richest country on the planet?

mschuster91 21 hours ago

> Still, the basic truth remains: if we want more affordable day care—for kids or pets—we need to use less of what’s expensive: skilled labor. That means either importing more people to do the work, or investing harder in ways to do it with fewer hands.

Both has serious problems. #1 is politically untenable (unless, of course, continuing the status quo of turning a blind eye towards employers abusing undocumented people to drive down wages), and #2 is fundamentally impossible until we gain AGI. It's bad enough when bad AI deletes production databases [1] - I'd raise hell when an "AI cat care" provider would kill my cat, and probably engage in some sort of self-justice should an "AI child care" provider kill or maim my child.

[1] https://www.heise.de/en/news/Artificial-intelligence-Vibe-co...

nisegami 21 hours ago

Perhaps the "barrel children" concept can be utilized within countries like the united states where the parents work in urban centers to provide for the children living in lower cost rural areas?

dukeofdoom a day ago

Maybe property taxes. Cities keep bumping these up. But also the intersection of people that neet multiple sets of requirements approaches zero pretty quickly. I watched a guy that's a professional filmer, and he explained that actually the circle he's in is pretty small. So while the set of people that want to do his career is fairly large. That people that jumped through all the requirmeny hoops is like filter. So he has no problems finding work because of it

moomoo11 a day ago

There’s a lot of PE activity in this sector imo.

They buy out all these established places and jack up the prices. It goes from calling them to book to some polished booking portal.

It’s mostly catered towards those who can afford it, so the 200k base SWE x 2 family can afford the 2x jacked up prices, and they continue increasing the prices every 1-2 years.

  • orangecat a day ago

    They buy out all these established places and jack up the prices

    Is the theory here that the previous owners were altruistically pricing below what the market would bear?

    • joncrocks 21 hours ago

      I think the theory is that they buy up a significant portion of the market, i.e. consolidate lots of independents. Then they raise prices in concert, and take advantage of reduced competition.

      • em500 21 hours ago

        Wouldn't that create a good opportunity for people to start new pet cares, and undercut the presumably overprized PE-consolidated chains? Pet care doesn't seem to be highly regulated or have other high barriers to entry AFAIK.

        • BobaFloutist 18 hours ago

          PE seems to do well in industries where consumer choice has a good amount of inertia, where it's a pain in the ass to change providers - anything that's at least partially trust and reputation based and where people order to lock in a choice and sit on it.

          Basically, they're liquidating built up customer goodwill.

    • csa 21 hours ago

      > Is the theory here that the previous owners were altruistically pricing below what the market would bear?

      As someone who has done research on pricing in a range of sectors, it’s usually some form of ignorance rather than altruism.

      In case you think I’m just picking on child care providers, I will provide an additional example — non-VC SaaS services were often wildly mispriced/underpriced until the “charge more” mantra became more widespread (thank you, patio11).

      • wmorgan 21 hours ago

        Concerns about reputation, too, as well as general friction. I used to do the menus for my dad's restaurant, which was always a big hassle first of all with the typesetting and going to the printers and everything, and then also it was such a struggle to get him to go up on prices. He'd just rather undercharge a little bit and make less money than be known as the guy in town who sold the "expensive" burgers.

    • blargey 9 hours ago

      I'm starting to think "altruistic pricing" is a skewed framing to begin with. The implication that not maxing out every trick in the book to find the highest price the market will "bear" is a loss.

      That "slack", where people provide better goods and services, for a lower price than the market could theoretically bear, is the very definition of Having Nice Things.

      The implied "optimal" price discovery is a highly adversarial process - derived from an every-growing playbook of price discrimination tactics, deceptive marketing, high-pressure sales tactics, exploitation of intertia and other external overheads, covert cuts to the quality being provided, etc, etc.

      Such pricing is both a symptom and cause for "low trust society" behaviors. The increasing ubiquity of those "efficient" pricing strategies may very well have amounted to a covert pillaging of the commons.

      • lesuorac an hour ago

        "altrustic pricing" is also skewed because monopolies and competitive markets have different economically correct prices.

        When you have a monopoly you want to supply less at a higher price because it's more profit overall. See chart under "Monopoly Price and Profit" [1]. Layman way to think about this is doubling your price more than doubles your profit (per unit sold) and when you have no competition might not even drop your sales in half.

        [1]: https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Economics/Econo...

    • moomoo11 12 hours ago

      PE buys all these businesses out (there's demand, and its rising), and they close most of them to consolidate into cold, brutal buildings.

      PE did this with medical providers. When I was a child family doctors were a thing (btw, 2000s). I saw in my area that a lot of the small practices were bought out, and now there are medical "campuses" which have like dozens of different providers. I was talking to my dentist about this and she explained it to me that way so unless she's lying idk what to say.

  • fsckboy 21 hours ago

    >o the 200k base SWE x 2 family can afford the 2x jacked up prices

    you are talking about housing in a high income area and of course those prices are going to be higher, it would start out shocking if they weren't, and quickly stabilize where we are now, as people loaded up their wagons and headed toward the landrush

    >It’s mostly catered towards those who can afford it

    all markets cater to those who can afford it. if not, prices go down, or up, to establish a new equilibrium.

  • blakesterz a day ago

    That was my first thought as well. I know PE is famously eating up Vets, I wonder if they've started on these too?

    • andrepd a day ago

      It's so great living in the ~best~ only system for organising the economy.

      Working people can't afford homes or starting a family, but at least we are generating amazing value for shareholders.

      • orangecat 21 hours ago

        Working people can't afford homes

        Always amusing that this is the go-to argument against free markets, when the major cause of housing unaffordability is that governments prevent housing from being built.

        • csa 21 hours ago

          > Always amusing that this is the go-to argument against free markets, when the major cause of housing unaffordability is that governments prevent housing from being built.

          I’m not sure where you live, but in my little corner of California, this is not the major problem.

          The bottleneck is builders.

          There are requests from local government for affordable housing all the time, but builders earn more on the higher end stuff.

          The governments are starting to do workarounds by bundling high end developments with affordable housing, so I hope that works moving forward.

          Source: My buddy who is a general contractor. I don’t know how this works, but he has pointed out local examples to me.

          • ProfessorLayton 17 hours ago

            Builders may earn more making "higher end stuff" but the people who can afford those units can also afford the less expensive ones, pricing everyone else out. More housing, regardless if it's affordable or not helps keep prices in check.

            Dictating what builders can make, if they can at all, is a large reason housing prices have gotten out of hand.

          • bombcar 9 hours ago

            Builders gonna build for most profit. Why wouldn’t they?

            But if they build tons, the older stock drops in value. Nobody is paying $500k for a 20 year old house if a brand new one is available for $500k next door.

            • csa 6 hours ago

              > But if they build tons, the older stock drops in value.

              Maybe I wasn’t clear.

              The local builders are at capacity. They literally can’t build any more.

              > Nobody is paying $500k for a 20 year old house if a brand new one is available for $500k next door.

              People are paying $700k for a 70 yo 750 sq ft house in a mediocre neighborhood, and $1m+ for a 50 yo 1000+ sq fr house.

              New houses start at $1.5m and quickly go up from there.

              Most of the new housing is not in the most desirable neighborhoods (there is no space to build new SFH housing in there), so the houses in the better, established neighborhoods are holding their prices. Note that the prices might be lower than the new houses (sometimes), but they are not going down.

              A result of this, using your example, is that there are rarely comparable old and new houses at similar prices.

          • kcb 10 hours ago

            So the response of the government is to add even more rules and limitations to building housing…

            • csa 6 hours ago

              > So the response of the government is to add even more rules and limitations to building housing…

              I mean… they are rules, but not limits. Low-income housing is being built. All of the locals I know consider it a win.

              Note that “low income” housing qualification here is about $60k for a single person (often retirees) and $120k+ for a family of four.

tayo42 a day ago

Child care is incredibly expensive, idk how anyone who isn't incredibly rich does it. Like 1k a month to get your child watched for 3 half days a week.

Who has a spare 1-2k laying around per month?

Also annoying this article introduced Baumol effect without mentioning what it is and just plugging a their book.

  • JTbane a day ago

    It seems like the childcare companies recognize that it's either one parent quits their full-time job or pays them.

    • bombcar 9 hours ago

      Quit your full time job and do home childcare!

charlie90 17 hours ago

weird, I thought the labor theory of value was "debunked".

exasperaited a day ago

[flagged]

  • ectospheno a day ago

    Some people have pets they love. Some people have jobs they need that have long hours. The intersection of those sets is not empty. I guess I’m glad your life is so great that this isn’t a problem for you. Some grace for people not you may serve you well in life.

    • rkomorn a day ago

      My dog would bark if we left her alone. Wouldn't make a difference to us since we wouldn't hear it, but I refuse to subject my neighbors to it.

      I've had neighbors that clearly had no such concerns.

      • exasperaited a day ago

        I too have neighbours who have no such concerns. One of them was within hours of me calling the RSPCA to protect their terrified, yapping lonely pup until another neighbour politely talked to them. [0]

        Those people shouldn't have pets either.

        It's a childish western obsession: grown people with lifestyle animals. It has only got worse as childish western people acquired puppies to process their pandemic loneliness that they left alone when their old lives returned, while serious (poor) people had to deliver them food.

        [0] which in retrospect I wish I'd done, because it would have exposed rather earlier exactly why the small dog was being left on its own in a garden of a house where the family in question were not actually resident. The small dog was perhaps trying to communicate something that might have materially changed our behaviour.

    • exasperaited a day ago

      There is a solution to this, though, and it is the solution that generations -- generations -- of people have chosen.

      1) don't have a pet that you will have to leave alone for too long because it is cruel to do this just so you have a pet to keep you company when you have time to enjoy it

      2) there is no 2)

      I have plenty of grace for people in my life -- much, much more than you might imagine. I have no patience for people who treat the happiness of their pet as transactional and have created a service economy to support it.

      • ectospheno 21 hours ago

        Life is change. Many people get pets when they can take care of them. Then their job changes. I think you and I may differ on the meaning of grace and patience.

        • SketchySeaBeast 21 hours ago

          And pets can be a twenty year commitment. If the possibility of a dog having to end up in doggie daycare is so heinous a thought that one shouldn't ever allow it, then the answer is no one should have pets, because no one can effectively plan for that time. People move, accidents happen, partners leave, life conditions change, it is totally unavoidable.

          • exasperaited 21 hours ago

            > then the answer is no one should have pets

            That is definitely the more ethical answer, then.

            I do not have a pet because despite having the space and working from home, I would be asking an animal to be lonely with me when it could be happier elsewhere, I would have to leave that animal in kennels if I needed to travel, and as a non-driver there are too many ways I have to travel where it is IMO inappropriate to take a pet.

            This is not a thing that makes me personally happy. But it's the more ethical answer.

            > Accidents happen, partners leave, life conditions change, it is totally unavoidable.

            And pets can be found new homes in those rare situations.

            • ectospheno 19 hours ago

              > And pets can be found new homes in those rare situations.

              The average lifespan of a dog is 10-13 years.

              The average lifespan of a cat is 13-17 years.

              The average tenure for a job in the US is 4 years.

              It isn't rare. Can I guess you'd give up your child too if your job changed?

              • exasperaited 19 hours ago

                [flagged]

                • tomhow 10 hours ago

                  Could you please stop posting inflammatory/abusive comments and flamebait? You've unfortunately been doing it repeatedly. It's not what this site is for, and destroys what it is for.

                  If you wouldn't mind reviewing https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and taking the intended spirit of the site more to heart, we'd be grateful.

          • doubled112 21 hours ago

            Just trying to think of how much change my dog has seen. She's been with us through college, two children being born, getting married, moving a few times, different jobs, a pandemic, more.

            I still haven't needed doggy day care, but I fully understand how it would happen. There have been periods we've probably been lucky she hasn't developed behaviours (or bit me in my butt to remind me she still existed).

        • exasperaited 20 hours ago

          But luckily for you are sure your definition is the correct one and therefore you sling it around in accusations.

      • fredophile 21 hours ago

        A couple years ago I got a puppy. At the time I worked from home. A few months ago I got a new job and now I have to go into the office. She spent the first two years of her life with me being used to me almost always being around. It would be cruel to suddenly leave her alone all day five days a week. What are you suggesting people should do in similar situations? Should I only work remote for the rest of her life? Should I have taken her from the only home she knows and given her to someone else who works from home?

        • exasperaited 21 hours ago

          The solution is to find her a new home, yes. Sorry.

          • fredophile 21 hours ago

            Why is that a better solution than paying someone to take care of her while I'm at work?

            • exasperaited 21 hours ago

              [flagged]

              • fredophile 16 hours ago

                So instead I should uproot her and move her to a new home with people she doesn't know. When they go through a life event like changing jobs, getting injured, having to move to look after a family member, having children, etc they should repeat the process and shuttle her off to another strange place.

                > will you continue paying doggie day care out of consistency for her, or will you stop?

                In that situation I'd probably continue but cut back. I've always paid for classes, private training, and other enrichment activities for her so this wouldn't be any different.

                > Because if you stop, you're taking away someone and somewhere and maybe several other animal friends who she's formed an attachment to. For your own needs.

                Parents do this to their children all the time. Should parents not move to a new city because their children would be cut off from their current friends?

                > it's no different to dumping a child in boarding school

                No, it's no different to dumping a child in public school or daycare. They get taken care of while I work and when my work day is done I can spend time with them.

                > I think doggie day care is a sign of a society in ethical decline.

                You've made a number of comments about doggie day care being immature or a sign that society is declining but you've never made a coherent argument for why that is. What is immature or unethical about wanting my pet taken care of when I'm unavailable, planning for that, and paying someone for the service they provide?

              • rkomorn 20 hours ago

                > I think doggie day care is a sign of a society in ethical decline.

                If anything, it's a sign of the opposite. Before, people would just leave their dog at home all day regardless of the impact to the dog.

                The fact that more people are now willing to spend money (and time to get the dog to daycare) so that their dog isn't left home alone is unarguably more ethical.

                • exasperaited 20 hours ago

                  I accept that one can make this argument, but since not leaving your dog alone can be implemented in other ways (arranging to leave them with friends and family, arranging swap relationships with one or two other dog owners, etc.) I am not convinced by the whole dog parent/furbaby/school bus BS, which is infantile and indicative of a society that now prizes immaturity and low compromise.

                  • rkomorn 20 hours ago

                    I don't understand how your alternative solutions are any different to taking a dog to a daycare location.

                    Are you conflating dog walkers and dog daycare?

                    And how is taking more care of your dog than used to be the norm indicative of now prizing immaturity and low compromise?

                    People are investing more time, effort, and money into their pets than ever before. That is the antithesis of immaturity and low compromise.

  • happytoexplain 18 hours ago

    The tone of this comes off as childishly provocative. Aside from that, it looks like you're assuming they are being conflated simply because they both end in "day care"? Is the underlying issue actually that you find the use of a term commonly associated with children to be offensive when used to describe animal care (reading your other comments)? That particular sensitivity is exhausting (but understandably common, given our psychology surrounding our children).

  • general1726 19 hours ago

    Obviously you have never experience whining of a dog for hours because its owner has to go to work. Especially smaller ones with high pitched whining.

    • exasperaited 10 hours ago

      As I commented elsewhere, I have, and I have very nearly called the RSPCA on their owners.

      I think these people should not have pets (not least because dogs fully can be trained to be happier alone).

      If you work away from your home for long days, you should consider not having a social animal as a pet. Get a cat; they don’t give a shit.

  • bpodgursky a day ago

    Can you read?

    > Pet care is less regulated than child care, but it too is subject to the Baumol effect. So how do price trends compare?

    It's obviously a comparison between a highly regulated and less regulated market to try to identify the cost driver.

    • exasperaited a day ago

      And it necessarily conflates them so that the comparison is meaningful. Otherwise why not compare it to, say, gardening?

      • BobaFloutist 18 hours ago

        Because gardening isn't a decent analogy for less regulated childcare.

  • impish9208 a day ago

    Wait until you see the dog daycare van in my neighborhood! It’s like a school bus that picks up and drops off your dog. And your pup will come home with a report card in the evening. It’s very cute and whimsical, but definitely a sign of the times.

    • exasperaited 21 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • fredophile 21 hours ago

        > a nation that treats dogs as children is a nation that cannot possibly hope to condemn childish bickering, name-calling and flat-out toddler lying in its ruling class

        I don't see how the two are related. How does treating dogs as family members prevent people from being politically active?

  • antisthenes 19 hours ago

    This is the adult equivalent of sticking fingers in your ears and going "la la la, I can't hear you".

  • cl0ckt0wer a day ago

    Because dogsitters can't charge as much

  • Klonoar a day ago

    The label is shit, but I'd lump things like dog _boarding_ in and that has absolutely skyrocketed in price in recent years.

    It's not something I'd directly compare to child care costs but it's not insignificant if you have pets you care about.

    • SoftTalker 21 hours ago

      If you have pets you care about that much, take them with you or don't do the things that require you to be away. So much is about "I want" and refusing to accept reality. If you are away from the house for 12 hours a day then having a socially intelligent pet such as a dog is an experience you will simply have to do without in your life. If you want a pet, get some fish or a hamster.

jmclnx a day ago

Yes it is rising and how would one stop it ? In reality there is no way to stop it outside of what the article recommends. Plus this also applies to many other labor intensive industries.

People who work in these industries want to be paid and deserve to be paid enough to live on, so the money needs to come from somewhere.

Lets pretend a way is found to make things real cheap, doing that means many people will not be able to purchase other items, thus harming the bottom line of many other industries.

Add to that the very rich is hording wealth. It seems today's economic society is racing to a big crash, unless a way is found to release that wealth to subsidize these activities. I think the wealth is there, but it is locked up by the very rich.

monkeyelite a day ago

It’s expensive because people are willing to pay a lot for it.

Complaints about child care costs never end in “so I stopped paying them”.

  • makeitdouble a day ago

    > “so I stopped paying them”.

    This was exactly what I got from a colleague about a decade ago. Day care was so expensive it was eating half of her salary, so she quit, stopped paying for day care and stayed at home instead.

    A lot of couple do the math and end up in the same place, where working their ass off to earn more, just to pay more doesn't make sense.

    • lesuorac an hour ago

      > A lot of couple do the math and end up in the same place, where working their ass off to earn more, just to pay more doesn't make sense.

      I think if you're breaking even on daycare and salary then you're still coming out economically ahead to keep working.

      Daycare costs stop once you enroll the kid into school. Typically salaries scale with years of experience so you're forfeiting ~7-9 years of salary growth by stopping work.

      That said, there are non-economic reasons to raise your kids ...

    • bombcar 9 hours ago

      Exactly this. And those people never complain about daycare costs because they’re not paying them at all.

      And for awhile the market looks good as the prices can rise as the “cheapest” leave.

      But eventually it will collapse.

  • WesleyLivesay a day ago

    No, but it might cause some people to say "so I am not having kids"

  • bitlax 21 hours ago

    Wouldn't that be single-earner families?