Business
Rising Costs Are Causing Couples to Delay or Forgo Having Children
Another doctoral candidate in economics, Abigail Dow of Boston University, found that as the price of child care rose, birthrates fell as families chose not to have children, stop at one child or delay pregnancy. Yet it may take decades to fully understand how these choices will shape the economy as today’s younger generations move through their peak childbearing years, said Kenneth Johnson, a demographer at the University of New Hampshire.
In interviews with couples in their 20s and 30s, many said they wanted to reach key milestones before having children, such as buying a house, paying off student debt or making enough money to afford child care. Others prioritize travel or financial stability. All said they were unwilling to compromise on these goals, even if it meant delaying parenthood indefinitely or not having children at all.
The Cost of Having a Child
Child care is often the second-biggest expense a family faces, after rent or a mortgage, said Karen Benjamin Guzzo, a family demographer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The lack of affordable child care has long been a problem, Dr. Guzzo added, and as everyday costs like groceries, utilities and health care rise, child care becomes one more weight on already stretched budgets.
The average annual cost of care for one child in the United States was about $13,000 in 2024, up nearly 30 percent from 2020, according to Child Care Aware of America, a nonprofit group. And as the summer approaches, camps and programs can add up to more than $1,200, on average, for the season. This cost alone is keeping three out of four families from enrolling their children in traditional summer programs, according to Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
Even before a child arrives, the costs rack up. A study by the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker published last year found that the average additional out-of-pocket cost for patients with employer insurance who gave birth was nearly $3,000 in the United States.
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By Shawn Paik
June 12, 2026
Business
AI is cutting hours of office work, but also creating a new kind of busywork
As the use of artificial intelligence spreads across companies worldwide, it is relieving workers of tedious old chores but creating new ones.
A new survey of individuals using AI found it made them more productive, saving each roughly 11 hours per week. But at the same time, the workers on average have to spend more than six hours “botsitting,” checking the AI output, fixing mistakes and rerunning the prompt.
“Most people don’t realize the amount of time that they’re spending working on the tools to get the time savings that they’re professing,” said Paul Leonardi, Duca Family professor of technology management at UC Santa Barbara.
Leonardi is one of the co-authors of the new study published by the Work AI Institute, whose contributors include academics from Stanford University and UC Berkeley. The institute is sponsored by AI company Glean. Leonardi said its research output maps broad trends in understanding AI’s impact on work.
The research surveyed 6,000 digital workers across the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia between December and January.
The report found that we are in a phase of significant personal productivity gains, but few companies are translating these gains into revenue and business growth.
While 75% of individuals reported a boost in productivity, only 13% of the organizations say they have seen significant business gains as a result of AI adoption, the survey found.
The survey analyzed anonymized, aggregated workplace data from companies using the Glean Work AI platform, a private search tool used to manage their internal information.
Over the past six months, Silicon Valley companies have been urging their employees to max out their AI use . But the benefits of merely maximizing AI usage have been unclear, with instances such as Uber burning through their entire 2026 AI budget in four months, without shipping a usable feature.
The reason the boost in productivity sometimes leads to waste, Leonardi said, is the time people spend correcting the bot’s work and gathering the right files, documentation, and tacit knowledge required for it to produce high-quality output.
“It’s pretty striking the amount of time and effort people are spending,” Leonardi said.
Most employees now spend over six hours a week of their workday babysitting their work chatbots, the survey said.
There is a “thick, mostly invisible layer of human labor holding the whole thing together,” the report said.
The survey found that for every hour a worker spends getting useful output from AI, they spend roughly another hour making it usable.
Of the total time workers spend interacting with AI each week, 37% goes to botsitting, 36% to actually using the tool to produce work.
Part of the reason so much time disappears into botsitting is how often the tools fall short: Workers report that more than a third of AI sessions fail outright, requiring a full restart or substantial rework.
Paradoxically, as more workers hand over bigger parts of their jobs to AI, they are offloading personal judgment and responsibilities to the bots. The survey found 41% of workers say they sometimes deliver AI-generated work they couldn’t explain if asked.
The report highlighted an example of a junior software engineer, Robin, who pasted thousands of lines of AI-generated code before going to bed. But something in there was broken, which a senior engineer already behind on a deadline had to untangle, while Robin struggled to explain.
“I think what’s happening with a lot of these Gen AI tools right now is we’re essentially expecting individual contributors to act as managers,” Leonardi said. “They’re just managing these AI tools, AI agents, and we’re expecting that they’ll be able to produce way more, but we’re not taking into account all of the work that actually goes into managing.”
This problem isn’t likely to go away.
Business
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