The New York Times shared figures from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and Elizabeth Davis and Aaron Sojourner for the Hamilton Project which shows how much a country spends annually on child care per kid and, unsurprisingly, America was not near the top of the list. While countries like Norway ($29,726), Iceland ($24,427), and Finland ($23,353) provide generous financial support to parents through subsidized child care, the United States only provides $500 annually per child. “We as a society, with public funding, spend so much less on children before kindergarten than once they reach kindergarten,” explained economist Elizabeth Davis, who studies child care at the University of Minnesota. “And yet the science of child development shows how very important investment in the youngest ages are, and we get societal benefits from those investments.” preschoolteachers child care issues have hurt their careers