The Failed Economics of Care Work The care market is high-value but offers little reward to providers. Economists don’t know how to explain this. BY JANELLE JONES
Running on Empty Small-business owners providing child care struggled to survive with low pay and long hours before the pandemic. Now they’re verging on collapse. BY BRYCE COVERT
How the Pandemic Disrupted Care Families have been forced into impossible decisions to ensure that their loved ones get the assistance they need. BY TASMIHA KHAN
OCTOBER 19, 2020
Kuttner on TAP
Post–Election Day Purgatory?
Here’s the latest good news/bad news forecast about whether the election can be called on Election Day. The New York Times has very helpfully explored the degree of mess in seven key swing states. In Pennsylvania and North Carolina, the Republicans have made it so difficult to count all early and vote-by-mail ballots by Election Day that the odds of a complete tally in those states by election night are vanishingly small no matter how big Biden wins. However, the news is better in other
swing states. Arizona and Michigan will probably have complete counts by November 3 or the morning after. Wisconsin has raised obstacles to voting, but less so to counting. Even Florida, where a lot of Republicans have voted by mail, is not too bad. It may take one more day, but the result will be known in these states by Wednesday. Bottom line: If we go to the electoral map, Biden can still be projected as the Electoral College winner on Election Day or the day after, even if Pennsylvania and North Carolina are still in prolonged limbo. He can even win without Florida, though winning Florida would be a huge symbolic gain that would intensify the pressure for Trump to concede. Here are the numbers. If Biden as expected carries the swing states where polls show him well ahead (Virginia, Colorado, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, New Hampshire), he wins 286 Electoral College votes without Pennsylvania, North Carolina, or Florida. He even gets to a bare 270 without Michigan. And he is likely to win Arizona as well, for another 11 votes. Wisconsin would give him 10 more. So Biden has many ways to run the available table and get well over 270 by November 4, even with these expected long counts in a few states that he could eventually win as well. That’s not to say, of course, that Trump will concede. He and his allies will mount every conceivable challenge, no matter how far-fetched.