Albanese promises a childcare boost for working families

Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Education, Amanda Rishworth, reads to Ourimbah pre-schoolers while Federal Member for Dobell, Emma McBride, looks on and Labor Leader Anthony Albanese is in the background

The cost of childcare on the Central Coast was in the spotlight when NSW Labor Leader, Anthony Albanese, visited an Ourimbah children’s centre on November 13.

Albanese was accompanied by Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Education, Amanda Rishworth, and Federal Member for Dobell, Emma McBride, when he popped in to KU Ourimbah Preschool and Children’s Centre.

The visit coincided with the release of the Investing in Australia’s Early Childhood Infrastructure report from the Chifley Research Centre.

The report reveals that compared with the OECD average of 18 per cent, Australian families bear 37 percent of the cost of childcare.

Childcare costs are expected to increase in Australia in the coming year by 5.3 per cent.

McBride said they visited KU Ourimbah Preschool because a parent had written to her about the quality of early learning at the centre and her concerns that working families hard hit by COVID-19 were struggling to balance the budget, especially in communities like ours.

“It’s been really, really tough and unemployment and under-employment is having a big impact, more so on women,” McBride said.

“Under-employment of women in some parts of our community has increased to 34 per cent.”

Albanese said his Labor government would deliver a Working Families Child Care Boost to provide more support for families.

“The current childcare subsidy scheme penalises those that wish to return to work,” he said.

“Many second income earners lose money if they work a fourth or fifth day.

“Labor’s Boost will remove these structural barriers that are holding second income earners, mostly women, back from work,” Albanese said.

“Labor’s commitment to remove the cap on the subsidy, to lift the subsidy up to 90 per cent and improve the tapering so that 97 percent of families will be better off will make an enormous difference.

“That’s why we regard this as an absolute priority and why it was the centrepiece of our Budget Reply.

“This is sound policy, it’s good economic reform, it’s good for children, it’s good for families, it’s good for our economy.”

Source:
Media release, Nov 16
Federal Member for Dobell, Emma McBride