Government relief packages have failed to provide adequate support for low-income mothers, say experts at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, and that will have a long-term impact on their children.
Women with children are one of the most vulnerable populations affected by the COVID-19 pandemic since they’re often the primary parent and they’re more likely to have low-wage jobs, according to the brief authored by Joyce Beebe, fellow in public finance, Quianta Moore, fellow in child health policy, and Zeinab Bakhiet, research associate at the Center for Health and Biosciences. But the experts say that public health measures enacted to prevent the spread of COVID-19 are having unintended consequences on mothers.
Women comprise a significant portion of the workforce in industries that are now deemed essential services, and prior to the outbreak many working mothers were already the main x caregiver for their children. Now these women are balancing work, child care and the health of their family.
The brief covers how the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) modifies the existing Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA), provides additional funding for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) and creates the Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act in an effort to care for this group. However, the authors argue that working mothers’ young children are the unseen population most affected by the failure of this bill to reduce parental strain.
Young children are the most vulnerable in disasters because they are completely dependent on adults for their emotional, physical, mental and developmental growth, the authors noted. Increased parental stress can impede important interactions that support the child’s growth, both physically and emotionally.
“Without intentional, directed efforts to alleviate the strains of the COVID-19 pandemic on low-income women with young children, the fallout will be seen in 10 years when these children are in elementary school or entering middle school: our country will experience a surge of students with academic, behavioral and emotional challenges as a result of the unaddressed trauma that occurred during this time,” the authors wrote.
“COVID-19 will likely impact the U.S. economy for many months to come, but the impediments to the development of young children will be seen for decades,” they added.