Toronto Star

Why can’t we keep up with other nations on child care?

- Don Giesbrecht is CEO of the Canadian Child Care Federation. DON GIESBRECHT OPINION

Many Canadian parents know that paying for child care for young children while they go to work is painfully expensive. But do they (and our federal government) know that child care costs in Canada are among the highest in the world?

This not only hurts families, this hurts our children; it hurts Canada’s economy. If the Government of Canada truly wants to help the middle classes and women’s equality as its party line touts, then it must make higher direct investment­s to child care.

The new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es on the rising cost of child care fees concludes that the typical family with young children pays about a third of its income to child care. To put this into perspectiv­e, this is about $21,096 a year on average in cities such as Toronto — more than triple the average tuition cost to put an older child through university for one year.

This one-third ratio is much higher than in other parts of the world. Among 35 wealthy nations, Canada is found to be among the most expensive for child care. Only two countries, the United States and Ireland, are more expensive than Canada.

Helping parents afford this care through a properly funded child care system might appear to be expensive for society, yet many Canadian studies and reports show that of any policy geared to help struggling families, investment­s for high-quality care has the biggest economic payoff for parents and their children.

Investment­s in child care pays for itself. It has compoundin­g positive effects on women’s employment and pay. And it goes even further for low-income families, because it can move generation­s of children toward increased earnings, better jobs, improved health, more education and decreased criminal activity as adults.

Now imagine if quality child care cost 10 per cent, not 30 per cent, of a family’s income at most? This would provide more children with a strong start in life and contribute significan­tly to the economic security of women and families.

The finance minister’s recent increase of the Child Care Benefit — a tax-free monthly payment made to eligible families to help with the cost of raising children — does not directly address the rapidly rising cost of child care and early education programs. And it does nothing for the quality and accessibil­ity of child care at all.

Greater and more meaningful investment­s in child care are required from our government.

This would mean, according to Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t recommenda­tions, investing 1 per cent of Canada’s GDP into child care. Our government currently only invests 0.25 per cent.

An increase to the recommende­d 1 per cent would not only make child care more affordable, it would improve the quality of child care programs through supporting the education and training of early childhood educators. It would improve pay and benefits to the child care workforce — those compassion­ate people who care lovingly, creatively and profession­ally for children and who are so instrument­al in their developmen­t.

It is time for our government to invest adequately in child care and not lag behind in our internatio­nal community of wealthy nations.

Child care is a modern reality and profession­al service that is not going away. It is time to give our children and families quality, affordable, inclusive and accessible child care so we can all make Canada a better country.

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