Waterloo Region Record

Feds can spend more for child care: IMF

Researcher­s say $8B annually could spur economic growth

- Jordan Press

OTTAWA — Internatio­nal Monetary Fund researcher­s say the federal government can afford to spend $8 billion annually to reduce the cost of child care spaces nationwide because the program would pay for itself.

The proposal is more than 10 times what the Liberals have promised to spend annually over the next decade on child care.

The IMF predicts the cash would bring down the national average for child care fees by about 40 per cent, a figure expected to be high enough that it could entice more women into the workforce and drive greater economic growth.

By the organizati­on’s estimates, there are about 150,000 highly-educated women who are stay-at-home parents.

If they all entered the workforce and started paying taxes, the IMF says, they would boost economic growth by two percentage points, equal to about $8 billion more in federal income tax revenue — enough to cover the cost of the program.

But the IMF adds a caveat to the proposal: It should be conditiona­l on employment so that highly-educated mothers are prodded into the workforce.

A spokespers­on for Social Developmen­t Minister Jean Yves Duclos said the government’s commitment of $7.5 billion over 11 years toward child care would increase women’s labour market participat­ion.

“When quality educationa­l child care services are affordable, parents — particular­ly women — can more easily participat­e in the labour market and invest in their careers. Taking gender equality seriously means taking child care services seriously, and our government will continue to work on improving gender equality,” Emilie Gauduchon Campbell said.

The Liberals’ economic growth council, which met with IMF researcher­s as part of the study, recommende­d in a February, prebudget report that the government consider creating a national child care program to boost productivi­ty by getting more women, particular­ly those with younger children, into the workforce.

Maternal labour force participat­ion rates have risen in recent decades, but the IMF report notes there remains a gender gap in participat­ion and wages — one that isn’t as wide in Quebec, where there is a subsidized system.

The Liberals unveiled their child care proposal in this year’s budget, pledging $7.5 billion over 11 years, beginning with $500 million this year and increasing to $870 million annually by 2026 in order to fund spaces — or improvemen­ts — in provinces and territorie­s. The money could potentiall­y create 40,000 subsidized spaces over the next three years at a cost of $1.3 billion.

The federal government has to sign funding agreements with provinces and territorie­s before the money can flow.

A key step in that process took place last month when Duclos and his provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts signed a national framework that sets the goals for federal child care spending. At the time, Duclos hinted that the deal could one day lead to a national system similar to the one in Quebec.

But the IMF also believes the Liberals’ signature Canada Child Benefit might be having the opposite effect on women in the workforce.

The $23-billion-a-year benefit is worth up to $6,400 annually for a child under six, and up to $5,400 a year for children six to 17. The benefit is income tested, meaning that the less a family earns, the more it receives in benefits per child. The IMF says the benefit doesn’t provide incentives for parents to work or get job training.

The effect on low-income families may be the largest, with the IMF team calculatin­g that they would see their finances worsen if both parents work due as a result of a reduction in the child benefit, increases in taxes, and covering the high cost of child care.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Liberals unveiled their child care proposal in this year’s budget, pledging $7.5 billion over 11 years, beginning with $500 million this year. But IMF researcher­s say that figure could be boosted to $8 billion annually, with potentiall­y positive...
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS The Liberals unveiled their child care proposal in this year’s budget, pledging $7.5 billion over 11 years, beginning with $500 million this year. But IMF researcher­s say that figure could be boosted to $8 billion annually, with potentiall­y positive...

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