Now the CHIPS Act Is Going To Subsidize Child Care Too
If Congress wants to spend taxpayer money on child care services, it should pass a bill authorizing that.

A federal effort to throw about $40 billion in taxpayer cash at semiconductor manufacturers is now going to double as a backdoor effort at expanding federal subsidies for child care.
According to The New York Times, the Commerce Department is set to unveil new rules on Tuesday that will effectively force recipients of the new federal semiconductor subsidies to "guarantee affordable, high-quality child care for workers who build or operate a plant." The Times reports that the new rules will not specify how recipients use the funding, though it could include everything from "building company child-care centers near construction sites or new plants" to "directly subsidizing workers' care costs."
We'll have to wait until the rules are made public to fully judge the situation, but given those options, it would seem like most companies will choose to simply pass along some of the subsidies to offset workers' child care costs. Which is great for those workers—provided they can actually find care.
The reason that child care is unaffordable for many families is ultimately a supply-side problem that's unlikely to be solved—and could actually be made worse—by subsidizing the demand side like this. And it's a supply-side problem that's largely the fault of governmental regulations like occupational licensing schemes (often with mandatory education requirements that have nothing to do with knowing how to take care of kids) and requirements regarding the number of staff per child.
Without repealing those supply-side constraints on the availability of child care, increased subsidies that flow to only a handful of workers will likely allow those families to afford care at the expense of others. The overall availability of child care won't increase and the subsidies will likely only inflate costs (as they always do).
There's also a procedural issue here. Namely: If Congress believes it is in the best interest of the country to increase federal subsidies for child care, it ought to pass a law that does that. Doing so would allow for a comprehensive debate about the costs involved, the government regulations that inhibit the availability of care, and the best ways to ensure that American families can afford whatever level of child care they might desire.
It should go without saying that the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 is not that bill. This new rule seems to be an entirely post hoc construction by the Commerce Department, which is responsible for implementing the law and seems vaguely aware that affordable child care is a problem keeping some workers out of the labor force.
That's a real issue, but Rube Goldberg-ing new mandates into an expensive and misguided industrial policy is no way to make social policy. Well-intentioned or not, the Commerce Department's repurposing of the CHIPS Act isn't going to make child care any more affordable or available for the vast majority of workers.
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Next you’ll be wanting them to declare a war before they start one.
Don’t you care about the children?
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I applaud your good taste, noble bot.
Yet you reluctantly voted for this clown and his puppet masters.
Gee. Who will you reluctantly vote for in the next election?
Or will you abstain, then complain about the choices available?
Unless Polis is on the ballot. Then Reason editors can eagerly vote for the most dreamy libertarianish President ever.
Reason writers supported statism, authoritarian, big spending, big government Dictator Biden last time, about as far as possible away from a “libertarianish” as politically possible. Maybe they will go for Harris or Buttplug this time over Trump, DeSantis or Haley. Their editorial sure look that way.
Whoever checks the three Reason boxes: weed, ass sex, and open borders.
Now they’re naming laws after 70s TV shows.
Second only to the Dukes of Hazzard.
Will the new school lunch bill be called M*A*S*H?
Or the next time a RIHNO puts in a law that mmics the enviro psychos in Cali it will be called hogan's heros
The kids are small, maybe they can help clean the machines.
that's the spirit. make yourselves useful you little guys
Fascists are going to do fascism.
If you voted for any democrat, this is on you.
Even if you don't know you voted for a democrat, or how many times you did.
Even if you’re dead.
It's also on Republicans for not fielding a less corrupt and decrepit candidate than Joe Biden.
Sure, Sure; Trump would've been so much worse at this than Biden./s
Are you kidding? How many more people would have died from Mean Tweets II?
Mean Tweets 2: The Tweetening
It will be a great day when our daycares have all the money they need and our chip manufacturers have to have a bake-sale to buy a clean room... no, wait... it will be a great day when our chip manufacturers have all the money they need and our children have to have a bake-sale to buy a daycare... no, that's not it either. Wait... I'll get it, 1s... ah, fuck it, here's your money.
a chicken in every garage and a cadillac in every swimming pool!
"That's a real issue, but Rube Goldberg-ing new mandates into an expensive and misguided industrial policy is no way to make social policy. "
But... but... but... isn't that the way the spineless weasels do it?
That poor kid in the picture. That face is terrifying.
Wait until the hair sniffing starts.
Is not a supply side problem, it’s a problem with excessive demand: too many single mothers and two income couples handing off child rearing to others.
Who knew Democracy! could lead to never ending government largess?
(Bonus points for citations of documents or publications)
Marx did.
But government by executive and bureaucratic fiat is a good thing. Just ask any Democrat.
You just can't keep Biden away from little girls. Ask his daughter.
My favorite half of the CHIP act was always Panch.
How dare you question the altruism and utopian vision of the Democrats in Congress who clearly believed that declaring the purpose of the bills they pass into law - in writing, in the preamble - ensures that their fantasies will automatically be realized through printing and spending money. Who could possibly be against promoting domestic technology production by guaranteeing daycare for technology industry employees – even if it doesn’t actually result in actual daycare for their children or increased domestic technology production?! Economics is hard, you cruel heartless [insert culture wars derogatory epithet label of the week here] Reason commentatorialists!
It takes taxing the hell out of a nation for the liberal woke village to raise a child. No one should ever be responsible for their own child. (sarc)
+1000000
A plug for central guidance.
https://www.quantumvibe.com/strip?page=2405
Anyone who doesn’t see the brilliance of including a childcare subsidized requirement needs to go back and take Econ 101. It’s very simple: we are missing about 1/3 of the qualified workforce because women were forced to stay home during the pandemic. Every civilized western nation does better at childcare and therefore expanding the workforce than the US. AND, this policy was removed from the Inflation Act, because it is considered social policy when it is ECONOMIC policy. Educate yourself - do you believe in a strong America or not?
Yeah man; Pay em double and see if they’ll go to work… /s
Only stupid people are against armed-theft man…. /s
Sincerely, Your Self-Entitled Socialist thugs.
everyone was forced to stay home you dope. school kids, teachers, restaurant wait staff, cooks, carpet layers, roofers, hotel workers, car rental company staff, dental hygienists, cosmetic surgeons, lumber mills, hardware stores, farmers markets, carpet cleaners. shall i go on? a strong america was squarely upon us when the kook lefties shut it down based on junk science and feels. this week we learned that the virus was man made by the chinese and that the mask mandate did NOTHING…but don’t let the science intrude on your pretend economics and ignorant biases.
But if government doesn't subsidize things, how ever will consumers afford the imposed costs of regulatory compliance?
I guess when the only solution the media and political class can imagine is more government, every problem looks like a reason to expand the power of the State...