Harris meets with CEOs to drum up support for child care proposals
-White House
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[August 13, 2021]
By Susan Heavey and Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vice President
Kamala Harris underscored the importance of affordable childcare for
improving U.S. competitiveness during a meeting with top executives of
seven companies including Microsoft Corp and Etsy on Thursday.
Harris - seeking to build support for a $3.5 trillion measure that
tackles childcare, climate, healthcare and other Biden administration
priorities - said the business leaders had shown that providing child
care and paid leave boosted productivity and aided their recruiting
efforts.
The meeting, which included the heads of AirBnB Inc, Gap Inc, Chobani,
Seventh Generation and Patagonia, is part of the Biden administration's
push to ensure passage of the new legislation, whose mammoth size has
already caused divisions among even some Democrats. Affordable child
care "when we prioritize it as a nation, contributes to our ability to
be competitive globally," Harris said, adding it also had a direct
impact on recruitment, retention, worker productivity, and corporate
profits.
The White House said the companies participating in the meeting
supported child care and paid leave policies.
Harris said Build Back Better, Biden's agenda for the U.S. economy's
post-pandemic recovery, was aimed at lowering costs for families,
helping businesses and strengthening the economy, while addressing
longstanding "fissures and failures" in American society.
Economists estimate that lack of access to family-friendly policies,
such as child care and paid parental leave, explains nearly a third of
the decline in U.S. women’s labor force participation relative to other
OECD countries.
Nearly 2 million women left the labor force during the COVID-19 pandemic
to care for children and elderly relatives, and many have not yet
returned to work.
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Vice President Kamala Harris meets with business leaders about the
so-called care economy of national social services in her office in
the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House grounds
in Washington, U.S., August 12, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
On Wednesday, Biden met with business and education
leaders including the heads of United Airlines and healthcare
provider Kaiser Permanente to discuss efforts to address ways to get
more people vaccinated against COVID-19.
The coronavirus has upended the economy and killed more than 617,000
people nationwide.
Businesses have in general struggled to hire workers during the
pandemic for various reasons, though unemployment has fallen after
spiking last year amid widespread shutdowns.
After passing a $1.9 trillion coronavirus-related rescue plan into
law in March, Democrats are now pushing the $3.5 trillion measure,
which includes $726 billion for universal preschool for 3- and
4-year-olds and child care for working families, and aids caregivers
of the elderly and disabled.
"When workers don’t have adequate care for their families, that can
translate to lower productivity, increased absenteeism, and higher
turnover – all hurting the bottom line for businesses," a White
House official said, adding that a separate coalition of more than
275 businesses had backed the child care proposal.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey, Andrea Shalal and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Lisa Lambert, Hugh Lawson, John Stonestreet and Jonathan
Oatis)
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