What Is Caregiving?

Whether it’s a newborn baby, an aging parent, or ill spouse, care is a universal experience we all will be impacted by. The systems that provide and finance care are deeply connected to our social insurance programs like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Paid Family and Medical Leave. Care connects us across families, communities, and generations. It enables people to work, learn, and thrive, sustaining both individual wellbeing and the broader economy. Yet despite its fundamental importance, care work—whether paid or unpaid—is often undervalued, under-supported, and unevenly distributed.

Care is in crisis: the current caregiving system is severely underfunded and fragmented, leaving millions of working families unable to access affordable, high-quality care across childcare, paid leave, and long-term care.

In Their Own Words

By the Numbers

Academy Resources

This article is the first in a three-part series examining the growing crisis facing America’s long-term care system, and why states must improve home care jobs.
This article is the second in a three-part series examining the growing crisis facing America’s long-term care system, and why states must improve home care jobs.
This article is the final in a three-part series examining the growing crisis facing America’s long-term care system, and why states must improve home care jobs.
As the Academy marks 40 years during a time of profound change and debate about the future of our social contract, we convened our annual Policy Summit in Washington, D.C.
On July 30, the Academy brought together social insurance champions to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Medicaid, Medicare, and the Older Americans Act and recommit to the unfinished work ahead.
The content of this Toolkit is drawn from the National Academy of Social Insurance Report of the COVID-19 Task Force Policy Translation Working Group, entitled Social Insurance during the Pandemic: Successes, Shortcomings, and Policy Options for the Future.
The content of this Toolkit is drawn from the National Academy of Social Insurance Report of the COVID-19 Task Force Policy Translation Working Group, entitled Social Insurance during the Pandemic: Successes, Shortcomings, and Policy Options for the Future.