The math behind:

Parents havent paid for childcare in generations.

Parents havent paid for childcare in generations.

Parents havent paid for childcare in generations.

Overview

Because gender equality began in 1925, childcare became a national priority nearly a century earlier than in our reality. In this alternate timeline, women’s full participation in the workforce during the 1930s made childcare not a “women’s issue,” but an economic necessity. Legislators — half of whom were women — understood that the economy couldn’t grow without supporting working parents. As a result, the United States established universal childcare as part of the Second New Deal, framing it not as welfare but as infrastructure — an investment that paid for itself many times over. The math supported it: for every $1 spent on childcare, the economy gained more than $5 in productivity and tax revenue. By the 1940s, publicly funded childcare was as normal as public school. Today, in this Sheconomy timeline, parents haven’t paid for childcare in generations — because when equality came early, care became collective.

Reality data points that informed the research

Reality data points that informed the research

42%

42%

42%

Studies show women policymakers direct 31–42% more resources toward family and social infrastructure.

5:1

5:1

5:1

For every $1 spent on childcare, the economy gained $5 in productivity and tax revenue.

Events that led up to it

1925: Alternate reality begins

In this experiment, we went back 100 years and made women and men equal in the economy. Key changes included making women 50% of company executives, 50% of stock market investors, 50% of the startup founders getting funded, and 50% of financial decision makers at home.

1925

Economic Equality Established

Women gain equal economic and political rights, entering the workforce at the same rate as men.

1933

The Case for Childcare

The U.S. faces the Great Depression. With full female labor participation (instead of 24.3%), childcare demand doubles.

1936

Universal Childcare Act Passed

Building on WPA data ($80/child, $400M national cost), childcare becomes part of the Second New Deal.

1940s

Nationwide Expansion

Publicly funded nurseries open across the country, modeled after WPA centers.

1970s

Two Generations of Access

Public childcare becomes universal and normalized, supporting families across income levels.

2020s

The Care Dividend

The U.S. reaps a century of compounding returns.

Where economic equality isn’t the finish line, it’s the starting point.

Copyright © 2025 – All Right Reserved

Where economic equality isn’t the finish line, it’s the starting point.

Copyright © 2025 – All Right Reserved

Where economic equality isn’t the finish line, it’s the starting point.

Copyright © 2025 – All Right Reserved