Childcare is the average amount spent by all households, not only by the households which have childcare expenses. I spent essentially $0 on childcare now that my kids are old enough to stay home alone if my spouse and I go out. I expect to continue to spend $0 for the next 3-4 decades.
> Housing is underweighted in rents and overweighted in owner equivalent rent.
About 2/3 of Americans "own" their home. The owner-equivalent rent also happens to be about 2/3 the sum of (owner equivalent rent plus rent). That is not an accident, but rather is causally linked.
I would agree on that but compare weighting on college. Presumably not all kids make it to college but annual childcare costs in any licensed facility costs as much as college tuition so it still seems low.
Also though you may not notice it but your taxes are probably going up every year to cover additional public child care costs even if you aren’t paying directly.
Medical is probably one of the biggest mismatch categories though
Childcare is the average amount spent by all households, not only by the households which have childcare expenses. I spent essentially $0 on childcare now that my kids are old enough to stay home alone if my spouse and I go out. I expect to continue to spend $0 for the next 3-4 decades.
> Housing is underweighted in rents and overweighted in owner equivalent rent.
About 2/3 of Americans "own" their home. The owner-equivalent rent also happens to be about 2/3 the sum of (owner equivalent rent plus rent). That is not an accident, but rather is causally linked.