Child care cost is high, but Ivanka Trump overstated it

Ivanka Trump tours a Siemens training center in Berlin, Germany. (Getty Images)

Ivanka Trump tours a Siemens training center in Berlin, Germany. (Getty Images)

At a meeting in Berlin focused on empowering women entrepreneurs, first daughter and presidential adviser Ivanka Trump said her father stood completely behind women in the workplace.

“He’s been a tremendous champion of supporting families and enabling them to thrive,” Trump said.

She said the thousands of women who have worked for her father know this and that her father would prove it with his policies.

“The single largest expense in over half of American households is childcare, even exceeding the cost of housing,” Trump said on April 25. “So it’s an enormous problem and it’s one my father is committed to tackling”

The high cost of child care has been well documented. Child Care Aware, a trade and advocacy group, found that it cost on average over $17,000 a year for infant day care in Massachusetts. The question is, does paying for child care top all the other expenses households have to cover, such as housing and food?

Government data say it does not.

The latest data on child care come from a 2011 survey by the U.S. Census Bureau. It found that for all families with children under 15 years old, child care cost 7 percent of their monthly income. The fraction was highest for families making less than $1,500 a month. They represented about 10 percent of the sample and paid nearly 40 percent of their income for child care. (However, the margin of error was quite large.)

So then we looked at what Americans spend on their other needs. The Bureau of Labor Statistics found that in 2015, the average married couple with children spent about 31 percent on housing, followed by about 18 percent on transportation. For single parents, housing ate up about 37 percent of their budget, and transportation, about 17 percent.

Health care was the only category that took up a lower fraction than child care (which the expenditure survey did not track). Married couples with children spent about 6.8 percent and single parents about 5.2 percent on health care.

We found two bits of information that add a bit of support for Trump’s assertion.

The New America Foundation, a center-left think tank in Washington, reported in 2016 that in a handful of states, including West Virginia, Mississippi, New York and Nevada, costs can rise above 30 percent of the state’s median income. But the underlying calculation used an expected cost of child care, not actual spending.

A 2015 article in Forbes reported, “For many parents the cost (of child care) is greater than housing, transportation or utilities.” However, the source behind that was a survey from the Child Care Aware organization. That group’s latest report is more restrained.

It said the price tag in every state “rivals families’ annual expenditures on housing, transportation and the cost of tuition at a four-year, public university.” It went on to say “in 38 states, the cost of infant care exceeds 10 percent of the state’s median income for a two-parent family.”

But neither statistic puts the cost of child care above all other expenses for half of all households.

We reached out to the White House and as of publication, were still waiting for numbers.

Our ruling

Trump said that child care is the single largest expense faced by half of American families. We could find no data to support that. The number we did find suggests it isn’t the case.

A government survey in 2011 found that the average family spends about 7 percent of its monthly income on child care. For the poorest households, the number rises to nearly 40 percent.

Meanwhile, the government’s consumer expenditure survey found households with children spend at least 30 percent of their money on housing and at least 17 percent on transportation.

The two data sets are not perfectly comparable, but they don’t suggest that child care tops the list of expenses for half of all families.

Child care is a staggering burden for lower income households. With that in mind, we rate this claim Mostly False.