(2008) study a policy change that introduced a price cap on already highly subsidised childcare for children aged 1–9, thereby halving the average hourly rate from 14.7 SEK (USD1.75 or GBP 1.22 at today’s rates) and show that these changes led to increased attendance mostly among children...
We emphasize that this number may fall later in the pandemic as testing capacity increases, although some individuals may still never get tested–especially schoolchildren, who are often asymptomatic. The age-specific transmission rates in the school rooms is given by the matrix...
and children in childcare made up a small yet consistent percentage of the COVID-19 cases in Ohio during the last 20 weeks of 2020 (0.38% and 0.15%, respectively), and these percentages did not significantly differ in the 10 weeks when transmission rates were high (>5% positivity rate). ...
(level of income allowable for enrollment in childcare subsidy) and child maltreatment rates at the state level. In this way, the study examines the policy impact of choices made during program implementation rather than the impact of an individual parent receiving subsidy. However, such findings ...