Press Story

A ‘universal childcare guarantee’ for children up to 11 would boost economy by extra £13 billion a year, report finds

  • Universally accessible and affordable childcare would create a ‘double dividend’ for UK economy, say IPPR and Save the Children
  • Change would increase parents’ earnings by £13 billion a year while generating £8 billion per year for the Treasury, close gender pay gap and help more women to progress at work
  • Families on lowest incomes would gain most and 1.6 million children would benefit financially, according to joint report

Investing in a universal guarantee of affordable childcare for all families until the end of primary school has long been seen as a route to raising educational attainment, narrowing the gap for disadvantaged children and helping achieve equal pay for women.

Now a new report has found that it would also yield a double dividend to the economy, through the resulting increase in parents returning to work, or extending their hours.

This alone would boost parents’ wages by £13 billion a year, according to the report, published by IPPR and Save the Children. That would be on top of the direct economic impact of extra government spending.

Increased parental working would enable the Treasury to recoup an extra £8 billion a year from increased tax and national insurance revenues and from lower social security payments. Today’s report calls for a ‘universal childcare guarantee’ - a comprehensive offer of affordable and accessible care, for all children from the end of parental leave until they leave primary school. This would replace the current incomplete patchwork of childcare entitlements, benefits and allowances for working parents.

It would mean some 700,000 households with 1.6 million children could see their incomes rise, with the largest gains flowing to households on the lowest incomes. At the same time families would save between £620 and £6,175 a year on the eye-watering current cost of childcare, depending on their circumstances (see Note 5).

With more women able to return to full-time work, they would progress further and faster in their roles and the gender pay gap would narrow as a result, with lone parents and the parents of younger children standing to gain the most. This would mean an overall boost to the productivity of the UK workforce, according to the researchers, at a time when there is a shortage of workers across the economy.

Investing in more childcare provision in England would also create an estimated 130,000 additional jobs in early years education and care.

Members of Save the Children’s Parent Campaigner Network described to researchers how the current system creates obstacles to their returning to work.

“If I can’t afford the childcare, I just can’t go to work – there's no choice,” said one. “You kind of feel like you can’t reach your potential,” said another. A third parent said: “I’m always either earning a couple of pounds more than my childcare, or I’m losing out.”

Tasha, 39, from Wiltshire, said: “I used to work full time but after my fourth child, I was advised it was better financially not to be working because the cost of childcare meant there was more outgoing than coming in.

"And now I am stuck. The people at Universal Credit told me I have to go back to work, but how can I when that means I can’t afford childcare? What I would earn on minimum wage full time is what I would need to pay for childcare. All our money goes on childcare, what are we left with for bills?"

The report sets out detailed changes that would be needed to deliver the promise of universally affordable and accessible childcare that millions of parents badly want, spanning 10-plus years from the end of parental leave.

These would range from expanding free childcare hours for the under-twos to introducing wraparound care from 8am to 6pm for school age children, including outside term time (see details in note 4), and should be introduced in stages, the report says.

The total cost of this investment would eventually be £17.8 billion a year, partially offset by the £8 billion a year direct gain for the public purse from additional parental working, and a further £2.1 billion savings from closing existing schemes that would no longer be needed. IPPR suggests the difference could be funded through new tax measures (Note 6). Costs are likely to fall over the next decade as primary school pupil numbers are expected to decline.

Rachel Statham, IPPR associate director and lead author of the report, said:

“A universal and affordable childcare guarantee from ages 0 to 11 would deliver a step change for millions of young children and their families, giving more children access to high quality early years education, while helping to grow the economy, and grow families’ incomes.

“The double dividend it would bring to the UK economy through higher wages, stronger tax revenues and greater productivity would itself be a significant return on the investment, and comes alongside the financial boost to young families from falling childcare costs, giving more parents the option to return to work sooner or increase their hours.

“A universal childcare guarantee would begin to level the playing field for women at work and close the gender pay gap, while levelling up on critical early childhood development by offering every child access to more, high quality early education.”

Sam Freedman, senior fellow at the Institute for Government and a senior adviser to Ark Schools, co-author of the report, said:

“The early years system is broken. It’s confusing, and extremely expensive, for parents. Most staff are paid at minimum wage levels. And the best provision is targeted at children from the wealthiest areas. Increasingly nurseries are run by private equity firms.

“A Universal Childcare Guarantee would be a huge help to families, but it would need to be accompanied by an overhaul of the market to ensure the funding went on better quality provision and higher wages rather than private equity profits.”

Becca Lyon, head of child poverty at Save the Children, said:

“Parents we speak to, regardless of their income, are crying out for the childcare system to change. There is a real chance here to be bold and invest in children and future generations to come.

“If made a reality, a Universal Childcare Guarantee would be life-changing for families – creating an easy-to-use childcare payment system for all, dramatically cutting childcare costs, ensuring the nurseries their children love are properly funded, and providing free breakfast and after-school clubs when children are older. We owe it to children to give them the very best start in life and that begins by transforming our broken childcare system.”

ENDS

Rachel Statham and Sam Freedman, the report’s authors, are available for interview

CONTACT

David Wastell, director of news and communications: 07921 403651 d.wastell@ippr.org

Liam Evans, senior digital and media officer: 07419 365334 l.evans@ippr.org

CASE STUDIES

For case studies please contact Rhian Lubin, Save the Children media manager: 07904 330200 r.lubin@savethechildren.org.uk

NOTES TO EDITORS

  1. The IPPR and Save the Children paper Delivering a childcare guarantee by Rachel Statham, Sam Freedman and Henry Parkes, will be published at 0001 on Tuesday Dec 6. It will be available for download at: Delivering a childcare guarantee | IPPR
  2. Advance copies of the report are available under embargo on request
  3. Estimates of the impact of increased parental working on the economy overall and on Treasury revenues are based on the IPPR tax benefit model. Modelling assumes that the employment rate of mothers of younger children equals the employment rate of mothers of older children, alongside higher rates of full-time work among existing working mothers of younger children. For more details see Annex 1 in paper.
  4. TABLE: Detailed recommendations and costs

  5. Family savings compared to current childcare costs would depend on exact circumstances. A working single parent with a two-year-old would save £6,175 per year under this guarantee, or £623 if in receipt of universal credit and making use of the childcare element of UC. A working couple with children aged one and three would save £4,116 per year in fees, whilst a dual earning couple with children aged four and seven could save £3,091.
  6. CHART: Income benefits of universal childcare offer are greater for poorer households
  7. IPPR suggests the further £9.7 billion needed to fund the full childcare guarantee could be derived from new tax measures, including abolishing the married couples’ tax allowance (raising £0.9bn per annum) and equalising the rate of tax on income from work and income from wealth (which could raise an additional £12bn per annum). Over time, the authors anticipate the scheme would deliver even greater returns on investment as more children benefit from access to high quality early years education and care, with impacts on their educational attainment and future earnings, and more families are lifted out of poverty by removing barriers to work for parents.
  8. A previous IPPR paper Towards a childcare guarantee by Rachel Statham, Henry Parkes and Shreya Nanda, found some low earning parents face effective tax rates up to 130 per cent if they wanted to work more than 25 hours a week – meaning that higher childcare fees, taxes and benefit withdrawal can cost them more than they earn from the extra hours. This report is at: http://www.ippr.org/research/publications/towards-a-childcare-guarantee
  9. Save the Children exists to help every child get the chance of a future they deserve. In more than 100 countries, including the UK, we make sure children stay safe, healthy and learning – finding new ways to reach children who need us most. For a century, we’ve stood up for children’s rights and made sure their voices are heard. With children, for children, we change the future for good.
  10. IPPR is the UK’s pre-eminent progressive think tank. With more than 40 staff in offices in London, Manchester and Edinburgh, IPPR is Britain’s only national think tank with a truly national presence. www.ippr.org