Author(s)
Henning Hermes
Philipp Lergetporer
Frauke Peter
Simon Wiederhold

Why are children with lower socioeconomic status (SES) substantially less likely to be enrolled in child care? We study whether barriers in the application process work against lower-SES children — the group known to benefit strongest from child care enrollment. In an RCT in Germany with highly subsidized child care (N = 607), we offer treated families information and personal assistance for applications. We find substantial, equity-enhancing effects of the treatment, closing half of the large SES gap in child care enrollment. Increased enrollment for lower-SES families is likely driven by altered application knowledge and behavior. We discuss scalability of our intervention and derive policy implications for the design of universal child care programs.

Publication Type
Working Paper
File Description
First version, August 2024
JEL Codes
I21: Analysis of Education
J13: Fertility; Family Planning; Child Care; Children; Youth
J18: Demographic Economics: Public Policy
J24: Human Capital; Skills; Occupational Choice; Labor Productivity
C93: Field Experiments
Keywords
early childhood
educational inequality
randomized controlled trial