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Esquire

U.S. Parents, Congrats on Your $300. You’re Still Getting Screwed.

Edna Bonhomme
5 min read
Photo credit: Getty
Photo credit: Getty

When I first visited Berlin, in the summer of 2012, I was captivated by all the dads. Cycling around the city, I noticed thirty-something, heavily tattooed men pushing strollers into and out of playgrounds; twenty-something, buttoned-up businessmen pulling their toddlers on four-wheeled wagons as if running rickshaws. These style-maven fathers, teeming with northern European ease, were everywhere, and seemingly of every ethnicity. Whether sitting with their mates outside a Sp?tkauf, Berlin’s bodega equivalent, with a toddler in their lap, or watching a soccer game at a bar with a newborn nestled in their arms, they were all doing the same, remarkable thing to my American eyes: It was the middle of the workday, and these men were taking care of their children.

At the time, I took my surprise as the byproduct of my life in Brooklyn, where I moved mostly in queer and leftist circles. (This was before I saw a recent UNICEF report on the richest countries’ family friendliness, which ranked the United States in very last place; Germany came in sixth.) The people I knew in New York had decided not to reproduce, many because of the exorbitant cost. We’d come of age amidst 2008’s financial crisis and its aftermath. I myself had never wanted children; I feared the high mortality rates for Black mothers in America, and I didn’t think I could afford it.

This week, as part of the American Rescue Plan the Biden administration began sending monthly payments of up to $300 per child to American families. This subsidy, known as a child tax credit, surely will assuage the spirit of working-class parents, especially those who’ve been furloughed or evicted during the Covid-19 pandemic, and will alleviate, if not correct, the class disparity that has long divided the country. Such support will provide a desperately needed backstop to families at risk of endemic poverty. That alone is reason to celebrate. But the policy does not go far enough: eligibility is not universal, and the program is set to expire in December.

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Germany offers proof that there’s a better way.

I moved to Berlin in 2017, because I desperately wanted to escape the Trump regime and it was the only place I was offered a job after completing my PhD, and soon felt the pangs of Kinderwunsch, or the desire to have a child. Though I sometimes envision my partner pushing a stroller alongside all of the other Berliner moms and dads, that dream has yet to come to fruition. If it did—if we were to start a family—we would have many advantages. It doesn’t matter that he’s British and I’m American; the German government provides extensive benefits for all families, irrespective of nationality. To start, we’d receive Kindergeld, a tax credit much like the one now in place in the U.S.: 219 euros each month for the first and second children, 225 euros for the third, and 250 euros for each subsequent child. The compensation wouldn’t end there: For the first year of our child’s life, we both would be eligible for a parental allowance, known as Elterngeld, amounting to up to two-thirds of our net wages. In April, the Berlin Senate passed a resolution that expands family services, increases parental allowance, and even fund recreational trips.

Photo credit: Getty
Photo credit: Getty

“I quickly realized the benefits of living in a social democratic society,” says Melissa Therese Perales, a U.S. citizen and mother of two who lives in Berlin. “For my first couple years in Germany, I did not have much financial security, and it was a big help having this extra help every month.” She used the money for childcare, and was able to stay home for the first year of each child’s life. Goitseone Montsho, a South African writer and podcaster, told me that after she had her first child, the social system here allowed her to feel assured she’d be supported in a foreign land.

The German system is far from perfect. Parental allowance is based on one’s earnings, which may not suffice for low-income or single parents, or those who are both. According to the federal government, 43 percent of single-parent families in Germany are low income. Under a program called Unterhaltsvorschuss, single parents who don’t receive financial support from the other parent can receive a supplemental payment for each child, starting at 174 euros each month and increasing as the child grows up. But while “it is always helpful to get this assistance as a single parent,” says Sascia Bailer, who’s German, “of course it is not enough.”

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Germany, like all nations, could do more to support families, and especially single parents. But over the past four years, I have come to realize your government can do more for families than write checks. It can provide free childcare, parental allowance, the best playgrounds you’ve ever seen, and state-funded recreation—without all the preconditions. In the U.S., birth rates in decline, and childrearing is increasingly unaffordable to all but the most privileged people. But parenting need not be a luxury. Raising children should not feel, as it so often does in America, like a burden. It should feel like a blessing.

The temporary US childcare direct monthly payments are a start, but I hope they’ll become permanent, so that the next time I visit New York City, I’ll see swarms of stroller-pushing parents on playdates with their children in the middle of the workday.

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