Spring Budget 2022: Childcare and gender
A pre-budget briefing on 'Childcare and gender' from the UK Women’s Budget Group – Spring 2022
UK Policy Briefing
A pre-budget briefing on 'Gender and Early Education and Childcare' from the UK Women’s Budget Group – Spring 2023
The early education and childcare system in England is not working for children, parents, workers or the wider economy . The absence of flexible, affordable and quality early education and childcare is a huge barrier to positive child outcomes, tackling inequality and increasing women’s employment.
The Spending Review in Autumn 2021, while emphasising the importance of the first 1,001 days of a child’s life, did not provide the level of investment required to meet the needs of children and their parents and this new investment is being outstripped by higher-than-expected cost rises which mean that real terms funding is expected to decline by 8% over the next two years.
‘The UK spends less than 0.1% of GDP on early education and childcare, the second lowest investment in the OECD’
Lack of access to high quality early education can leave disadvantaged children behind before they have even started school and require expensive interventions in the future. Around two-fifths of the total attainment gap between sixteen-year-olds from the most deprived fifth of families and the least deprived fifth of families is already present at age five.
The cost and unavailability of childcare is putting household budgets under strain and for many women ‘it doesn’t pay to work’: an estimated 1.7 million women are prevented from taking on more hours of paid work due to childcare issues, resulting in up to £28.2bn economic output lost every year.
A pre-budget briefing on 'Childcare and gender' from the UK Women’s Budget Group – Spring 2022
A pre budget briefing from the UK Women’s Budget Group – October 2021
WBG's response to recent reports suggesting that the Treasury is considering expanding the current early years offer for parents.
Ahead of the Budget, WBG is calling on the Chancellor to boost funding for early years and childcare.