By Aisling Gallagher*
Some eight months out from this year’s election, the National Party has launched a new tax rebate policy to help reduce childcare costs. At the same time, Australia and Canada are abandoning their own rebate policies for failing to really address childcare affordability issues.
It might be a good idea for New Zealand to learn from their experiences.
Childcare in Aotearoa New Zealand is some of the most expensive in the world, despite the government spending about NZ$2.3 billion annually on childcare through subsidies and payments to the sector.
National’s Family Boost scheme would give a 25% tax rebate on childcare expenses up to $75 per week to families earning less than $180,000. This rebate is in addition to the extended childcare subsidy announced by Labour last year.
On the face of it, National’s approach will return much needed money to families and has the potential to increase workforce participation. But overseas experience shows there are some fundamental flaws with offering rebates for childcare.
Turning away from rebate schemes
The Australian Labor government has just launched a major childcare review, noting their rebate and subsidy schemes – which have been in place since the mid-1990s – have not achieved the hoped-for affordability outcomes.
Government spending on support to parents has reached almost AUS$9 billion, yet it is estimated childcare costs have risen by 41% for families since 2014.
Canada has also recently moved from tax rebates for childcare, instead embarking on an ambitious public funding commitment to offer C$10-a-day childcare by 2026. The government has committed $30 billion to develop 250,000 new affordable childcare places by expanding the not-for-profit sector.
So, what can we learn from tax rebate funding models overseas?
As seen in Australia, tax rebate schemes are administratively burdensome. Their childcare rebate schemes were added into an existing funding model developed by previous governments, ultimately making the system confusing and complicated for parents and providers to navigate.
Similarly, National’s proposed rebate scheme will add yet another layer to what is now an already complex funding model, including the 20 hour early childcare education payment and the recently extended childcare subsidy.
Rebates ineffective on their own
Moreover, international experience suggests rebate schemes do little on their own to reduce childcare costs in highly privatised childcare markets.
Although money goes directly to parents, evidence shows there are limited benefits to families if there is no cap on the costs that providers can charge.
Any money going to parents risks being absorbed by fee increases. This occurred in Australia under the childcare tax rebate scheme introduced in 2004, with the following decade seeing what sector advocates called a financial “bonanza for private providers”.
Families who qualify for the childcare tax rebate package would get up to $75 a week more in their take-home pay if National forms the next government.
— Morning Report (@NZMorningReport) March 5, 2023
But some in the early childcare sector say the proposal doesn't address funding problems in the sectorhttps://t.co/0tJNU0V8cZ
But in a sector that is now almost 65% for-profit in New Zealand, any governmental attempt to control price increases risks being seen as “market interference”.
Proponents of rebate schemes argue that fee increases should not happen in theory, because such schemes empower parents as consumers. They can regulate costs through choosing services that best meet their needs, and change services when they are not satisfied.
But research has long shown that viewing parents as consumers of childcare in this way is a political fiction. Childcare markets do not work under textbook supply and demand imperatives.
The commonly held notion that parents will “talk with their feet” by changing childcare providers is simply not the case. As any parent will attest, changing your child’s care environment once the child is settled is a move they are loathe to make, even if the service down the road is cheaper.
Furthermore, parental choice in many regions is constrained by the lack of childcare services and long waiting lists. As we see growing privatisation and corporatisation of the sector, the range of choice is further limited.
Time for an overhaul
It is certainly time to consider childcare costs as a crucial issue affecting New Zealand households. But this needs to be part of a much more ambitious funding review of the sector.
These countries have the most expensive childcare https://t.co/UyFzRjNdb9 #equality pic.twitter.com/GJ9EueNr6W
— World Economic Forum (@wef) September 29, 2019
Overseas evidence has shown that the kind of intervention the National Party is proposing does little to improve affordability in the longer term, or address other thorny problems such as quality and access in childcare markets.
If we look at Australia and Canada, countries which have had extensive experience of these kinds of funding models, there is now a renewed incentive to explore more universal, publicly-funded childcare options.
This may involve stronger support for community, not-for-profit services, which are a shrinking part of the childcare landscape in Aoteoroa. At the very least, it would require a much stronger sense of market stewardship than is currently in place.
If political leaders are serious about making some real changes for parents, children and the wider sector, we should expect better than to repeat the same mistakes already made elsewhere.
*Aisling Gallagher, Senior Lecturer in Social Geography, Massey University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
28 Comments
Finland starts school at seven and a half. Primary kids do not need education other than basic reading. They do need to learn to be social creatures with a good sense of right and wrong. They need far more outdoor unsupervised playing because they get too little at home. And less education.
What makes us social creatures is largely innate and not learned - although locking someone away from society will definitely impact them. What I feel children lack is connectedness to wider groups of other humans of all types rather than the age selected clusters that education systems shoehorn them into. 6 year Olds don't have very strongly developed moral or thought systems, so as a cluster they're more likely to define pecking order than form quality social cohesion and develop strong values - so at best those are going to be pushed on them by one or two educators.
Given the Fins have the worst mental health in Europe, it's hard to say if the approach you outlined has a measurably superior outcome as these children age, or just another example of Finnish "our systems are great so long as we also get to define how they're measured". Their education system is deemed brilliant by themselves, despite them lacking any world leading universities or having noticeably better outcomes.
They do have a fairly strong monoculture though.
Why do we fund child care?
What do the useless parents actually do these day? Besides dropping them off , buying harry styles tickets, buying iphones..
Feck sake we spent over $1 billion PA on lunches...
What happened to " teaching a man to fish"... fecken hell?... now we give them the whole fish shop... and they still want more?
NZ is full of bludgers propped up by a government that talks freedom but delivers control in a communist fashion,
Health, education, crime, housing, suicides, infrasructure... all fecked by Ardern and co... however if your rainbow, green, woke, gang, maori, useless... just roll on up for the blank cheque
What do the useless parents actually do these day?
Work huge hours and commute to keep a roof over their family's heads. Ask any working professional if they'd rather spend more time with their kids if they got the chance.
Besides dropping them off , buying harry styles tickets, buying iphones..
Interesting how in all the coverage of the Harry Styles concert, I didn't see a single mention of toddlers attending en masse.
The old 'end all family subsidies' crowd from a generation where it was possible to capitalise a child benefit into a house deposit.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/property/family-benefit-paid-home-deposit/AR…
What would a universal child benefit have to be today to fund a 20% deposit on an Auckland home?
Lookup the definition of homeless. You obviously missed it. Correction they don't and frequently do not even have meagre income support and cannot access emergency housing (that for others is designed to only last in weekly to two week blocks and is not rentable as most do not have cooking surfaces or suitable cleaning facilities). We have the data to prove it... that is why they are homeless, which should be obvious to anyone with half a clue.
In that era the mothers could stay home to look after the babies and pre-schoolers with fully funded part-time kindergarten available for the 3 and 4 year olds. That's because a single blue collar wage was enough for a family.
There was plenty wrong with that system, but what we've transitioned to is no improvement.
Who ferken put the ladder down!!!
In my day my first mortgage was @25% with postbank. My second was 28% with broadbank. I worked and saved 20% deposit and paid nothing of the principle for 5 years.
I have never had any benefit from government,worked my arse off to pay for private medical insurance. Never got any family support and paid taxes all my life .. until I said " fuck it" I've paid my dues to support bludgers " 14 years ago... .
Since then I have made more money in property than in my whole life . Then some...
When you guys get to be old you will regret the dumb arse crap you do and say and wish you had listened to the boomers!...
I take solice and great pleasure in the pain you Gen Wankers, Yobbo's, Zombies will suffer at the hands of your own current stupidity, supporting of dumb ideaa, and backing of labours socialist green agenda.
.... Just as the pre Boomers did of us!
Overseas evidence has shown that the kind of intervention the National Party is proposing does little to improve affordability in the longer term, or address other thorny problems such as quality and access in childcare markets.
Be that as it may, we're not exactly awash with other parties lining up to give us comprehensive reform, are we? So the choice isn't between National's policy and some amazingly better alternative, it's that or the status quo (pending any future policy announcements pre-election, although I'm not sure we should accept that from a 2nd term government with an absolute majority that could have done anything it wanted if it felt it was important enough).
For starters, let's eliminate the foreign ownership component siphoning taxpayers' money offshore, not to mention that these subsidies are also aimed at reducing employers wage bills.
A Stuff analysis found the biggest four childcare businesses received around a fifth of all government funding allocated to ECE in a financial year, amounting to more than $450m.
According to Ministry of Education data, in the 2022 calendar year $242m went to Best Start Educare, owned by Chloe and Wayne Wright; $78m went to Provincial Education Group, owned by Busy Bees Australasia, in turn owned by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan; and $80m went to Evolve Education Group (Lollipops Educare), owned by an Australian private equity firm.
Another $53m went to Kindercare, owned by Auckland’s Wendelborn family.
Consolidated financial statements are publicly available for Best Start Educare, which was allowed to restructure from Kidicorp in 2015 into a tax-free charity.
The 2022 Wright Family Foundation statements show government funding for its 270 centres made up 73% of its $289m revenue, with the rest ($78m) in fees from parents. Link
The fact that BestStart are a charity that pays no tax is outrageous - 1/3rd of their rent on centres went to properties owned by the Wrights. If a big corporate decides to restructure into a charity, you better believe there's a financial benefit to doing so and not being taken by the spirit of altruism that day
Unfortunately, once you've gone down so far a private provider pathway. It becomes difficult to turn the ship around, there are so many vested interests in the sector now, and it is big, big money. It's similar to the aged care industry. The Govt is terrified of regulation, of rocking the boat, so will likely continue with the status quo (this goes for nats and labour). The whole system is absolute rotten, that it needs to be completely thrown out. No incremental change is going to help us at this stage. It's such a gargantuan task that no one knows where to really start... Also, it continuously shocks me that the government has no true line of sight in relation to parent fees... the whole sector is big black box despite being reliant on govt funding.
In no way am I ragging on community-based services, unfortunately they really don't get enough support to survive and can't take advantage of economies of scale like the chains. There is a huge difference between a stand alone service vs a corporate chain, it puzzles me that we expect them to operate on similar funding rates. This article hit the nail on the head https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/education/300814789/the-jugglenaut-how…
We don’t have 6 or 7 for-profit providers with equal market shares, so don’t have perfect competition- far from it. Oligopoly profits rein.
On that basis the government has every right to regulate the market.
We either get to a point of very strong competition (for-profits could be forced to tender and provide mandatory service levels and pay the regulatory costs ) or the government substantially expands the network of non-profit providers, in a similar manner to the school system.
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