Beyond the Medical Bill: The Hidden Financial, Employment, and Health Impacts of Caregiving
Barbara Mendez Campos, Christina Matz

TL;DR
Caregiving has significant hidden costs, including financial loss and health impacts, especially for women and marginalized groups.
Contribution
This symposium introduces new insights into caregiving's financial, employment, and health consequences using experimental and data-driven methods.
Findings
Caregivers often face lost wages and reduced retirement savings due to work disruptions.
Hiring bias against caregivers may be greater than bias toward parents.
Caregiving-related job disruptions contribute to cognitive decline, with disparities by gender and race.
Abstract
Unpaid caregivers provide an essential yet often unrecognized economic foundation for the U.S. healthcare and long-term care systems. Valued at over billions of dollars annually, their contributions surpass Medicaid’s total spending on long-term services and supports. Yet, despite their critical role, caregivers frequently face financial and employment barriers that jeopardize their own well-being. Many reduce work hours, leave the workforce, or forgo career advancement—decisions that come with steep costs, including lost wages, reduced retirement savings, and diminished Social Security benefits. These barriers disproportionately impact women, low-income caregivers, and historically underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, further widening economic and health disparities. This symposium examines the financial, employment, and health implications of caregiving across diverse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis · Retirement, Disability, and Employment
