this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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For daycare:
My local area costs $600-1000 per month, depending on the age of the child ($1k for infants, $600 for pre-school). If we assume 8 hours/day, 21 days/week on average (~250 working days per year). So each child costs $3.5-6/hr. Recommended staff to child ratio is one per 3-8 children, depending on age. If it's only infants, maximum possible wage (assuming everything else is free) is $18/hr (3 * $6/hr). If it's only pre-school age, the maximum possible wage is $28/hr (8 * $3.50/hr). Preschoolers will need more space than infants, so I imagine a large share of that difference in cost is for space, food, and activities.
So my guess is that people providing childcare make $10-15/hr, maybe a little more if they are overseeing a newer caregiver. This cost is already high for workers, so I really don't think salaries can go much higher without a fundamental change in how care is provided.
I can't speak to nursing homes though, because anything touching medical care is incredibly hard to find numbers for.
Ours was $120 / day for the older kids.
About 10 kids to a staff member
What city do you live in? That makes a big difference in terms of overhead.
Anywhere in Australia really