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Editorial: Massachusetts lawmakers must get serious about costs

By Eric December 1, 2025

Massachusetts is facing a significant affordability crisis that threatens the well-being of its residents, as highlighted by a recent report from SmartAsset. The report reveals that the Bay State is the most expensive place in the nation to raise a child, with costs soaring to approximately $44,000 per year for a single child, marking a 5.7% increase from the previous year. This staggering figure aligns with findings from ConsumerAffairs, which indicated that raising a child in Massachusetts costs nearly double the national average. As families grapple with soaring expenses in housing, food, childcare, and taxes, many are finding it increasingly difficult to make ends meet. A troubling report by Mass General Brigham and The Greater Boston Food Bank underscores this challenge, revealing that over one-third of Massachusetts adults faced food insecurity in 2024, a significant rise from previous years.

While the cost of living continues to climb, the wealth gap in Massachusetts is widening. A report from the Institute for Policy Studies noted a remarkable 39% increase in the number of millionaires in the state from 2022 to 2023, leaving many residents feeling squeezed between the affluent and the struggling. Lawmakers are urged to prioritize affordability for all Bay Staters, not just the wealthy. Governor Maura Healey has initiated some positive steps, such as the release of unused land for new housing developments and the launch of a $2.5 million Employer Child Care Innovation Fund aimed at improving access to affordable childcare. However, these measures must be part of a broader strategy to tackle the affordability crisis head-on. With energy costs driven up by state-mandated climate programs and the housing market remaining inaccessible for many, it is imperative for Massachusetts leaders to adopt a comprehensive approach that addresses the needs of all residents, ensuring that living and raising families in the state is attainable for everyone.

Affordability is an existential threat in Massachusetts. Policy makers should treat it as such.

We know high energy costs are squeezing Bay Staters. This week they saw their hopes of the Legislature focusing on saving money on bills thwarted in favor of climate initiatives.

Now a new report from SmartAsset finds that Massachusetts is the most expensive state in which to raise a child, costing parents roughly $44,000, up 5.7% from last year, when we also topped the list.

That’s for one child.

That matches a ConsumerAffairs study from earlier this year which found the costs of raising a child in Massachusetts almost double the national average.

“To calculate this figure, we analyzed key expenses such as housing, food, childcare and taxes for a household with one child,” said Brooklyn Bannister, a media relations specialist for ConsumerAffairs.

Buying a house is out of reach for far too many, and rents are eating up more and more of taxpayers’ paychecks. Food banks are doing a steady business.

Findings from Mass General Brigham and The Greater Boston Food Bank’s annual statewide food access report, released this summer, are sobering.

Approximately 2 million Massachusetts adults — over 1 in 3 residents — faced food insecurity in 2024. The report revealed that 37% of Massachusetts households faced food insecurity in 2024, rising from 34% in 2023 and nearly doubling from 19% in 2019.

Bay Staters are being hit from all sides, and “barely making it” can’t be the new normal.

There are some untouched by such struggles. A spring report from Institute for Policy Studies noted that the number of millionaires by net worth in Massachusetts rose by almost 39% from 2022 to last year — from 441,610 people to 612,109 people.

There’s a chasm between the comfortable and the squeezed in this state, and the squeezed now include those who used to be comfortable.

Massachusetts is a great state, and lawmakers need to pull out the stops so residents, even the non-millionaires, can afford to live and raise families here.

For starters, energy costs are out of control, and while Gov. Healey may blame Donald Trump’s administration for not releasing heating assistance funds, the state can’t ignore the Fiscal Alliance Foundation report which found that state-mandated climate and energy programs are behind the sharp rise in electric bills in Massachusetts.

We need more housing stock, specifically homes that are affordable. Healey deserves kudos for releasing more than 450 acres of unused land, in a bid to create up to 3,500 new housing units across Mass. We should make building in the Bay State easier and uncomplicated.

Last month the Healey administration launched the Employer Child Care Innovation Fund, a $2.5 million pilot program to help employers expand access to affordable, high-quality child care for working families. An excellent idea, and a great way to attract talent to Mass.

But we can’t forget workers who are already here and under the radar. The ones who serve the coffee, clean the office buildings, drive the Ubers, ring up the customers and work more than one job to care for their families.

Affordability across the board should be the mantra, and mandate, for Massachusetts lawmakers and leaders.

Editorial cartoon by Chip Bok (Creators Syndicate)

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