
Mapped: Childcare costs in Arkansas
Why it matters: Rising child care costs put a huge financial strain on families, forcing some parents — typically women — to either ratchet back their working hours or leave the labor force entirely, Axios' Emily Peck writes.
For single parents, the calculus can be even more painful.
It's also a drag on economic growth overall.
The big picture: The cost of child care in the U.S. just keeps climbing — a new report finds that prices rose 29% from 2020 to 2024, outpacing overall inflation.
By the numbers: The average annual cost of daycare tuition nationwide for two children — one toddler and one infant — rose to $28,168 last year, according to data from Child Care Aware, an advocacy group.
Zoom in: In Arkansas, it's $17,500.
Zoom out: The U.S. doesn't have publicly funded universal childcare.
However, the federal government does put money into the system for low-income kids through block grants to the states, as well as Head Start, the decades-old federal program that provides childcare, nutrition assistance and other services to the nation's poorest families
There were worries that the White House would stop funding Head Start, but the administration has said that won't happen.

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Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
History of monthly mortgage payments: Comparing costs then and now
In 1971, George Lucas released his first feature-length movie, the Baltimore Colts won Super Bowl V and the average 30-year mortgage rate was 7.54 percent. That rate is pretty close to what we're seeing today. Home prices back then, not so much. In 1971, the typical home sale price averaged $25,225, according to Census data, or about $195,000 in inflation-adjusted dollars in 2024. Last year, however, the typical home sale price actually averaged $418,975. Meanwhile, the median household income rose from around $10,300 annually in 1971 to roughly $80,600 in 2023. Over the years, a shifting combination of mortgage rates, home prices, incomes and inflation has made it ever more challenging to become a homeowner, and mortgage payments now take up much more of the typical budget. Here's a look at how they've increased over the years. The typical monthly mortgage payment has climbed dramatically in recent years, from about $1,100 in 2020 to double that — $2,207 — in 2024 (when not adjusted for inflation). When adjusted for inflation, the increase still works out to near an additional $800 a month. Home prices rose precipitously during the pandemic, from an average sale price of $328,150 in 2020 to $418,975 in 2024. At the same time, mortgage rates on 30-year fixed loans shot up. 'Today's homebuyer is financing $100,000 more than the buyer five years ago and doing so at a rate of 7 percent instead of 3 percent,' says Greg McBride, CFA, chief financial analyst for Bankrate. Similarly, mortgage payments rose 50 years ago, too. Between 1971 and 1981 — also boosted by prices and rates — the typical monthly mortgage payment went from around $1,100 to $2,650 in inflation-adjusted dollars in 2024. By 1981, the average sale price was $68,950, or about $238,450 in inflation-adjusted dollars in 2024. Monthly mortgage payments by year Year Average 30-year fixed mortgage rate Typical monthly mortgage payment 1971 7.54% $141.65 1972 7.38% $152.16 1973 8.04% $192.09 1974 9.19% $236.01 1975 9.05% $253.94 1976 8.86% $281.12 1977 8.85% $310.56 1978 9.64% $380.27 1979 11.20% $485.67 1980 13.74% $603.12 1981 16.67% $771.64 1982 16.06% $747.41 1983 13.24% $678.37 1984 13.88% $751.77 1985 11.85% $685.72 1986 10.39% $667.38 1987 10.40% $759.93 1988 10.38% $813.21 1989 10.25% $863.30 1990 9.97% $856.45 1991 9.09% $778.50 1992 8.27% $730.85 1993 7.17% $684.88 1994 8.28% $786.07 1995 7.86% $773.12 1996 7.76% $804.59 1997 7.57% $816.66 1998 6.91% $801.28 1999 7.46% $892.19 2000 8.08% $991.02 2001 7.01% $922.24 2002 6.57% $947.51 2003 5.89% $910.67 2004 5.88% $1,032.91 2005 5.93% $1,126.09 2006 6.47% $1,228.69 2007 6.40% $1,225.74 2008 6.23% $1,128.32 2009 5.38% $966.60 2010 4.86% $941.22 2011 4.65% $927.73 2012 3.88% $919.97 2013 4.16% $1,036.54 2014 4.31% $1,132.72 2015 3.99% $1,122.10 2016 3.79% $1,136.01 2017 4.14% $1,252.35 2018 4.70% $1,349.60 2019 4.13% $1,242.42 2020 3.38% $1,161.32 2021 3.15% $1,316.71 2022 5.53% $1,973.12 2023 7.00% $2,270.15 2024 6.90% $2,207.36 The other piece: incomes. From 1984 to 2021, the median household income went from $58,930 to $79,260, according to Census estimates. In that 37-year window, mortgage payments accounted for less than 20 percent of household incomes in all but five of those years. That changed in 2022, when both home prices and mortgage costs rapidly rose. That year, the average sales price was $432,950 and mortgage payments ate up around 31 percent of the $77,540 median household income. In 2023, that share increased to almost 34 percent. Currently, prospective homebuyers need an annual household income of nearly $117,000 to afford a median-priced home in the U.S., according to Bankrate's 2025 Housing Affordability Study. Mortgage payment share of monthly income by year Year Median household income Mortgage payment share of monthly income 1984 $58,930 15.31% 1985 $60,050 13.70% 1986 $62,280 12.86% 1987 $63,060 14.46% 1988 $63,530 15.36% 1989 $64,610 16.03% 1990 $63,830 16.10% 1991 $61,960 15.08% 1992 $61,450 14.27% 1993 $61,150 13.44% 1994 $61,800 15.26% 1995 $63,770 14.55% 1996 $64,710 14.92% 1997 $66,050 14.84% 1998 $68,470 14.04% 1999 $70,210 15.25% 2000 $70,020 16.98% 2001 $68,870 16.07% 2002 $68,310 16.64% 2003 $68,350 15.99% 2004 $68,250 18.16% 2005 $69,310 19.50% 2006 $70,080 21.04% 2007 $71,210 20.66% 2008 $68,780 19.69% 2009 $68,340 16.97% 2010 $66,730 16.93% 2011 $65,750 16.93% 2012 $65,740 16.79% 2013 $68,220 18.23% 2014 $67,360 20.18% 2015 $71,000 18.97% 2016 $73,520 18.54% 2017 $74,810 20.09% 2018 $75,790 21.37% 2019 $81,210 18.36% 2020 $79,560 17.52% 2021 $79,260 19.94% 2022 $77,540 30.54% 2023 $80,610 33.79% Other housing costs keep rising, too. Let's break down some aspects of homeownership: Property taxes: From 2019 to 2024, property taxes went up by 27 percent on average, according to CoreLogic. In some states, the increase has been much higher: Tax bills in Colorado and Georgia, for example, rose by more than 50 percent in the last five years. Homeowners insurance: As of July 2025, the national average homeowners insurance cost was $2,466 annually for a policy with a $300,000 dwelling limit, according to Bankrate data. 'Hidden' expenses: The typical single-family home costs more than $21,000 a year to own and maintain, according to Bankrate's 2025 Hidden Costs of Homeownership Study. Aside from insurance and taxes, those expenses include cable, energy and internet costs. Buyer's remorse: A full 16 percent of homeowners with at least one regret about their home purchase say their mortgage payment is too high, according to Bankrate's 2025 Home Affordability Report. The jump in mortgage payments in recent years isn't lost on me. In 2021, my wife and I bought a new house for our expanding family and work-from-home careers. After more than six months looking, we signed a purchase agreement and got a mortgage at 2.99 percent. We closed two weeks before our son was born, in early 2022. If the sale fell through, or we had decided to wait to buy until after our son arrived, that same home would've been completely out of reach for us later in the year. We would've been shopping for mortgages at rates close to 7 percent, and our payment would've increased by several hundred dollars a month. We're proof of the 'lock-in effect' that's keeping homeowners from moving and taking a new loan — especially one that'd double our monthly housing costs. Still, life happens. Incomes change, and the housing market does, too. 'In the absence of continually lower mortgage rates, home prices cannot rise faster than homebuyer incomes in perpetuity,' McBride says. 'After the outsized home price appreciation exiting the pandemic, most markets are likely looking at a very tepid pace of home price appreciation in the next few years as incomes, and the buying power of households, closes some of that gap.'
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
Oil Prices Lower on a Report US-Iran Nuclear Talks Will Restart
August WTI crude oil (CLQ25) on Thursday closed down -0.45 (-0.67%), and August RBOB gasoline (RBQ25) closed down -0.0043 (-0.20%). Oil prices on Thursday fell after Axios reported that the US plans to restart nuclear talks with Iran, which could eventually lead to reduced sanctions and increased Iranian oil exports. Nuclear talks might also stave off any new military attack by Israel on Iran. Additionally, the oil markets are nervous heading into this Sunday's OPEC+ meeting, which is expected to result in a decision for increased production. Nat-Gas Prices Rebound on the Outlook for a Smaller-Than-Average EIA Inventory Build Crude Oil Prices Supported by Middle East Tensions Energy Demand Optimism Pushes Crude Prices Sharply Higher Markets move fast. Keep up by reading our FREE midday Barchart Brief newsletter for exclusive charts, analysis, and headlines. Oil prices also had support from a new wildfire near a major oil sands field in the Fort McMurray area, which reminded the markets of the vulnerability of Canadian oil production during wildfire season. The oil market shrugged off the supportive June US payroll report, which showed a gain of +147,000, and the -0.1 percentage point decline in the June unemployment rate to 4.1%. Concern about a global oil glut is negative for crude prices. Last Wednesday, Russia stated that it is open to another output hike for OPEC+ crude production in August, when the group meets this Sunday. On May 31, OPEC+ agreed to a 411,000 bpd increase in crude production for July, following the same 411,000 bpd hike for June. Saudi Arabia has signaled that additional similar-sized increases in crude output could follow, which is viewed as a strategy to reduce oil prices and punish overproducing OPEC+ members, such as Kazakhstan and Iraq. OPEC+ is boosting output to reverse the 2-year-long production cut, gradually restoring a total of 2.2 million bpd of production. OPEC+ had previously planned to restore production between January and late 2025; however, production cuts won't be fully restored until September 2026. OPEC June crude production rose +360,000 bpd to a 1.5-year high of 28.10 million bpd. Gasoline prices have support from the American Automobile Association (AAA) projection that a record 61.6 million people will travel by car this Fourth of July holiday (June 28 to July 6), up +2.2% from last year and a sign of stronger gasoline demand. Oil prices continue to be undercut by tariff concerns ahead of the July 9 deadline when President Trump says he will implement reciprocal tariffs on imports from any countries that haven't yet reached a trade deal with the Trump administration. A decline in crude oil held worldwide on tankers is bullish for oil prices. Vortexa reported Monday that crude oil stored on tankers that have been stationary for at least seven days fell by -8.7% w/w to 80.22 million bbl in the week ended June 27. Wednesday's weekly EIA report was mixed for crude and products. On the bullish side, EIA distillate stockpiles fell by -1.7 million bbl, a larger draw than expectations of -1.2 million bbl. Also, crude supplies at Cushing, the delivery point for WTI futures, fell by -1.49 million bbl. On the bearish side, EIA crude inventories unexpectedly rose +3.85 million bbl versus expectations for a -2.7 million bbl draw. Also, EIA gasoline supplies rose by +4.19 million bbl, a larger build than expectations of +900,000 bbl. Wednesday's EIA report showed that (1) US crude oil inventories as of June 27 were -9.3% below the seasonal 5-year average, (2) gasoline inventories were -0.7% below the seasonal 5-year average, and (3) distillate inventories were -21.0% below the 5-year seasonal average. US crude oil production in the week ending June 27 was unchanged w/w at 13.433 million bpd, modestly below the record high of 13.631 million bpd from the week of December 6. Baker Hughes reported Thursday that active US oil rigs in the week ending July 4 fell by -7 to a 3.75-year low of 425 rigs. Over the past 2.5 years, the number of US oil rigs has fallen sharply from the 5.25-year high of 627 rigs reported in December 2022. On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Axios
8 hours ago
- Axios
A handful of states feel the biggest brunt of Trump's tariffs
Tariffs imposed by President Trump have generated tens of billions of dollars in revenue for the government — but the burden falls far from equally on different states. The big picture: Who pays for tariffs is a long-settled issue — American businesses do, to the tune of billions of dollars, in places like California and Texas especially. Driving the news: Economic research firm Trade Partnership Worldwide shared a new analysis with Axios showing the state-by-state cost of tariffs imposed by Trump from January through May. These are presidential tariffs — that is, tariffs imposed by Trump rather than Congress, mostly this term but some dating to his first term. By the numbers: From January 1 to May 31 of this year, California faced a tariff impact of $11.3 billion, by far the highest in the country. Texas was a distant second at $6 billion, followed by Michigan at $3.3 billion. In total, in 17 states companies faced a total impact of at least $1 billion over the first five months of the year. At the other end, 11 states had a burden of less than $100 million, with the smallest hits to Wyoming and Alaska at just over $16 million each. The intrigue: The burden crosses political boundaries, too — more than half of the most-impacted states voted for Trump in the last election.