Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia

Only 56 percent of women ages 15-64 participate in the labor market, a slightly higher share than the Europe and Central Asia average, but 18 percentage points lower than the share among men in Armenia. The conflicting demand on women's time f...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681931573219450490/Why-Should-We-Care-About-Care-The-Role-of-Childcare-and-Eldercare-in-Armenia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32644
id okr-10986-32644
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-326442021-05-25T09:29:10Z Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia World Bank INFORMAL CHILDCARE CHILDCARE CHILDCARE SERVICES ELDER CARE ELDERCARE Only 56 percent of women ages 15-64 participate in the labor market, a slightly higher share than the Europe and Central Asia average, but 18 percentage points lower than the share among men in Armenia. The conflicting demand on women's time for care and work activities represents a fundamental barrier to economic participation and generates a vicious circle of low labor market attachment and prominence of the care provider role that leads to increased vulnerability and gender-based inequalities. International evidence shows that support for childcare and eldercare affects women's labor market participation. This note examines the care needs of families with children and/or elderly household members and the provision of formal care services in Armenia with an emphasis on the availability, price, and quality characteristics. Based on the analysis of an independent mixed-methods dataset collected in several countries of Europe and Central Asia, this note documents the perceptions and barriers in the use of quality formal care in Armenia. Five main messages emerge from the assessment of supply and demand of formal childcare and eldercare in Armenia: 1) Although social norms strongly highlight the role of women as caregiver, there is scope for policy aimed at increasing access and affordability of childcare and early education: Around 24 percent of parents of children ages 0 to 5 currently not attending kindergarten report that the reason of no attendance is lack of the service or being unable to afford it. 2) The demand for childcare services is voiced predominantly by parents perceiving benefits for their child’s development and working (or willing-to-work) mothers. 3) Use of childcare is regressive: There are significant differences in enrollment to kindergarten and nursery between the poorest and the richest households (12.7 and 36.4 percent respectively). A well-developed childcare sector not only would help generating economic participation opportunities for women but also implies potential improvements in the school readiness for children especially for the most vulnerable households. 4) Day-care centers and home-based formats—if available—will be more compatible with prevailing standards of care for the elderly. 5) Quality is important for potential users of formal care services and the main challenges of the existing supply involves human resources (HR). 2019-11-20T15:53:43Z 2019-11-20T15:53:43Z 2017-04 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681931573219450490/Why-Should-We-Care-About-Care-The-Role-of-Childcare-and-Eldercare-in-Armenia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32644 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Poverty Study Europe and Central Asia Armenia
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic INFORMAL CHILDCARE
CHILDCARE
CHILDCARE SERVICES
ELDER CARE
ELDERCARE
spellingShingle INFORMAL CHILDCARE
CHILDCARE
CHILDCARE SERVICES
ELDER CARE
ELDERCARE
World Bank
Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Armenia
description Only 56 percent of women ages 15-64 participate in the labor market, a slightly higher share than the Europe and Central Asia average, but 18 percentage points lower than the share among men in Armenia. The conflicting demand on women's time for care and work activities represents a fundamental barrier to economic participation and generates a vicious circle of low labor market attachment and prominence of the care provider role that leads to increased vulnerability and gender-based inequalities. International evidence shows that support for childcare and eldercare affects women's labor market participation. This note examines the care needs of families with children and/or elderly household members and the provision of formal care services in Armenia with an emphasis on the availability, price, and quality characteristics. Based on the analysis of an independent mixed-methods dataset collected in several countries of Europe and Central Asia, this note documents the perceptions and barriers in the use of quality formal care in Armenia. Five main messages emerge from the assessment of supply and demand of formal childcare and eldercare in Armenia: 1) Although social norms strongly highlight the role of women as caregiver, there is scope for policy aimed at increasing access and affordability of childcare and early education: Around 24 percent of parents of children ages 0 to 5 currently not attending kindergarten report that the reason of no attendance is lack of the service or being unable to afford it. 2) The demand for childcare services is voiced predominantly by parents perceiving benefits for their child’s development and working (or willing-to-work) mothers. 3) Use of childcare is regressive: There are significant differences in enrollment to kindergarten and nursery between the poorest and the richest households (12.7 and 36.4 percent respectively). A well-developed childcare sector not only would help generating economic participation opportunities for women but also implies potential improvements in the school readiness for children especially for the most vulnerable households. 4) Day-care centers and home-based formats—if available—will be more compatible with prevailing standards of care for the elderly. 5) Quality is important for potential users of formal care services and the main challenges of the existing supply involves human resources (HR).
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
title_short Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
title_full Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
title_fullStr Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
title_full_unstemmed Why Should We Care About Care? The Role of Childcare and Eldercare in Armenia
title_sort why should we care about care? the role of childcare and eldercare in armenia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/681931573219450490/Why-Should-We-Care-About-Care-The-Role-of-Childcare-and-Eldercare-in-Armenia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32644
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