Costs of Children
Costs of Children2012
About this book
The expert contributors provide an assessment of how countries can handle the fair allocation of the costs of childcare. They look at the experience within Europe in recent years and show in particular how these interrelate with the objectives of improving income, employment and social inclusion. The book's conclusion reveals that choice is the key ingredient as families have different views and different degrees of support available from their relatives. Income and social inclusion can provide choice but ironically employment does not always. An employment-based model can sometimes narrow people's choices, particularly for people on low wages. The major concern is that most existing systems effectively discriminate against mothers.
Details
- First published
- 2012
- OL Work ID
- OL25732388W
Subjects
Child careSex discrimination against womenEurope, social conditionsChild rearingEconomic aspectsCosts