Preschool Investments Pay Off

The cost savings generated by early care and childhood education programs outpace most public and private investments.

According to the 2009 policy paper “Why America Needs High-Quality Early Care and Education” by the nonprofit Corporate Voices for Working Families, high-quality early childhood education programs focused on low-income children have a high return on investment.

The paper was meant to sway the country’s business and government decision makers by demonstrating how greater commitment toward such programs can reap rewards for society:

• Governments and taxpayers in the future would not have to pay as much for remedial and special education, criminal justice and welfare benefits if all 3- and 4-year-olds who live in poverty were provided access to a high-quality early childhood program. Further, as these children enter the workforce, their incomes — and consequently the taxes they pay — also would be higher.

• High-quality early childhood programs have generated benefit-cost ratios ranging from 2:1 to 17:1.

• Programs targeting at-risk families produce much higher returns on investment than most other economic development projects.

• High-quality early childhood programs have a greater impact on job growth than business subsidies. The “earnings effects” of such programs are three times greater than those from business subsidies.

• The cost savings generated by early care and childhood education programs outpace most public and private investments.

Access To Learning Matters

Poor children without access to high-quality early childhood education programs already have the cards stacked against them once they enter kindergarten.

According to the 2009 policy paper “Why America Needs High-Quality Early Care and Education” by the nonprofit Corporate Voices for Working Families, poor children face a wide gap in school readiness compared to children from families with greater means, particularly if they don’t attend preschool:

• Three-year-olds from low socioeconomic status (SES) families have average vocabularies of 480 words, compared to middle SES children at 750 words and high SES children at 1,100 words.

• The highest SES kindergartners as a group have 60 percent higher average achievement scores than those in the lowest SES group.

• Less than half (47 percent) of low SES kindergartners have attended preschool, compared to two-thirds (66 percent) of higher SES children. The higher SES group also has access to higher-quality programs.
Children from environments that do not stimulate them by cultivating cognitive and non-cognitive abilities are at a much greater disadvantage than others.