The Free-Market Family and Children’s Caretaking

71 Florida Law Review Forum 45 (2019)

17 Pages Posted: 12 Feb 2021

See all articles by Maxine Eichner

Maxine Eichner

University of North Carolina School of Law

Date Written: 2019

Abstract

How can market societies like our own best ensure that children get the circumstances they need to flourish? It turns out that there are two different reining visions of the role government should play when it comes to public policies that support families, each of which dominates the public policies in different countries. This essay considers which of these two systems does best at getting children the circumstances they need to develop well.

The first of these visions, which I call “free-market policy,” expects that families do best when they arrange for what they need privately through the market. The idea behind free-market policy is that families thrive when they provide what their members need on their own. In a free-market system, workers are supposed to bargain with employers privately about work hours. Parents are supposed to fund the material provision their children need. They must negotiate individually for family leave and other time off they need for caretaking of children and others. Parents are also supposed to provide caretaking themselves for kids or, alternatively, to arrange and pay for this caretaking. All this means that, under free-market policy, policymakers don’t focus on making sure children get what they need. Instead, they focus on creating strong markets and on increasing the size of the economic pie. This way, the rationale goes, every family will have a big enough slice of the pie to arrange privately for what their members need through market transactions.

The second vision of the role government should play when it comes to families, which I call “pro-family policy,” is premised on the view that government should work together with families to support the conditions that children need. Pro-family policy is built on the belief that families do better when government actively supports the conditions that they need to thrive. Like free-market policy, pro-family policy recognizes the importance of work and a strong economy. Yet, at the same time, this policy actively supports helping families get the circumstances children need to do best. This model sees the government’s role as helping people to harmonize paid work and family, as well as assisting parents in providing the circumstances children need.

Free-market policy, as the reader likely recognizes by now, is the reining vision in the United States. Meanwhile, pro-family policy dominates in most other wealthy democracies. This essay investigates how well each of these policy systems does in ensuring that children get the conditions they need to thrive.

Keywords: families, children, caretaking, caregiving

Suggested Citation

Eichner, Maxine, The Free-Market Family and Children’s Caretaking (2019). 71 Florida Law Review Forum 45 (2019), Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3773084

Maxine Eichner (Contact Author)

University of North Carolina School of Law ( email )

Van Hecke-Wettach Hall, 160 Ridge Road
CB #3380
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3380
United States

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