From Yahoo:
“Fastest-growing jobs in the
U.S. point to caregiving crisis as Boomers age”
Bank of America Global Research
projects that U.S. employment will increase by 6 million from 162.8 million
jobs in 2019 to 168.8 million jobs in 2029, with the bulk of those new jobs
involving human health and social work. Six of the 10 fastest-growing jobs are
in the health care space, and the spike in demand for home health and personal
care aides signals the coming crisis of caregiving for the roughly 71 million
Baby Boomers who are currently aged between 56 and 74. A 2020 AARP report found
that "more than 1 in 5 Americans (21.3%) are caregivers, having provided
care to an adult or child with special needs at some time in the past 12
months."
The demand for caretakers is
particularly straining the capacities of women across America, many of whom are
also bearing the brunt of child care amid the coronavirus pandemic and the
relative lack of parental leave policies in the country. “You see more and more
women who are telling us that they have to leave their jobs because they can no
longer actually balance both the needs of caring for a sick elderly parent or
caring for kids who aren’t in school or are preschool age,” Tina Tchen,
president and CEO of Time's Up, told Yahoo Finance. And the pay is low or
nonexistent: Among the top 10 fastest-growing occupations, home health and
personal care aides have the lowest median annual wage — and that doesn’t
include caretakers looking after family members on top of additional jobs. “Women
are bearing the brunt of this caregiving crisis,” Tchen added. “This has gone
on forever, but the pandemic has exacerbated it. So you see more women having
to leave their jobs, even if they had a job that was either open for business
or even remote working.”
'We need to invest in
caregivers' BofA Global Research predicted that this decade will
characterized by the growing “Care and Green Economy" across the country.
“Pink collar (nurses, carers, and health aides) and Green collar (solar
engineers, wind technicians, and battery experts, etc.) are the new White- and
Blue-collar professions,” the report stated. “We are strong believers in both
because 1) they are high-quality jobs that offer long-term work stability; 2)
they are hard to automate because they require strong emotional intelligence
and dexterity; and 3) they are exposed to sectors that are well-positioned
thematically, i.e. health care and renewables.” Home health and personal
care aides are a specific area expected to grow exponentially. BofA Global
Research is predicting that the occupation will grow by 32.6% by 2029, with an
employment change of 1,159,500 in that span of time. If the workforce
wants to attract more people to the field, according to Tchen, the job needs to
pay more. “We need to invest in caregivers,” Tchen said. “We need to
invest in that workforce and that infrastructure because more and more are
going to leave caregiving at some point in our lives, and we are going to need
that support. It shouldn’t be something which, traditionally, we have done in
the United States, which is to think that this is a problem that workers need
to solve by themselves.”
To address this ever-growing
need, some Democratic politicians have pushed for caretakers to be part of the
infrastructure bill that President Biden is trying to pass through Congress,
though the idea has been met with backlash from many Republicans arguing that
it would make the definition of infrastructure too broad. However, Tchen made
the case that caregiving is just as crucial to helping the economy recover as
are other parts of the labor market. “When you invest in a caregiver, that
caregiver is doing a job that allows somebody else to also go back into the
economy and to stimulate the economy and be part of our recovery,” she said.
“Building this infrastructure now is critically important.” To address the
financial strain related to providing time and services to others, President
Biden's stimulus bill expanded the Child and Dependent Care Credit which a
person can file for if they hired a caretaker to look after either their
children or their dependent who is either physically or mentally incapable of
self-care. The credit ranges between $3,000-$6,000 depending on how many
qualifying individuals there are. And while the financial aid is welcome, it’s
only a temporary fix for a longer-term issue that’s expected to only keep
growing. Until the caretaker hiring boom occurs, the temporal and financial
burden of caring for others will continue to disproportionately fall upon
women.
^ This Caregiving Crisis was
long-in-coming well before Covid and is now only getting worse. ^
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/fastest-growing-jobs-in-the-us-caregiving-crisis-181509840.html
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