The New Zealand Herald

Plea for preschool funding

Children join rally after study shows cut of $260m a year

- Simon Collins

Anew study estimates the Government has cut $260 million a year off funding for preschool childcare and education since 2010. The study by Infometric­s says the money has been cut by axing a higher subsidy rate for preschool centres with 100 per cent trained teachers, and failing to adjust all subsidy rates for inflation.

The study was commission­ed by the teachers’ union the NZ Educationa­l Institute, which rallied Wellington preschoole­rs to present colourful messages at Parliament yesterday asking MPs to pledge to restore the funding that has been cut.

They also want MPs to pledge to reduce teacher/child ratios and restore the former Labour Government’s goal of 100 per cent trained teachers in all early childhood services.

Labour education spokesman Chris Hipkins said he would sign all three pledges, although he could not promise to spend an extra $260m a year immediatel­y.

“The issue is around time frames. I couldn’t make a specific commitment around the rate, but would I be asking for more money for early childhood education? Absolutely!”

The 2010 changes were made in the context of a global financial crisis, a ballooning budget deficit, and a quadruplin­g of spending on early childhood education from $307m in 2001-02 to $1.2b in 2009-10 under Labour’s policies of 20 hours a week of free preschooli­ng for 3-and 4-yearolds and higher subsidy rates for

Hcentres with more qualified teachers. The top subsidy rate for centres with 100 per cent qualified teachers was abolished. Other subsidy rates have been raised only marginally. For example, subsidy rates for all-day teacher-led education and care centres with between 50 and 80 per cent qualified teachers have risen by only 2.7 per cent since July 2010, while education sector wage rates have risen by 8.5 per cent. For a video, go to nzherald.co.nz

Infometric­s says the Government would be spending $260m more each year if it had retained the higher subsidies for centres with 100 per cent qualified teachers, and raised all subsidy rates by 8.5 per cent.

For comparison, the Government is spending $1.8b on early childhood education this year, a sum that has grown, despite restrained subsidy rates, because of parents going back to work sooner after having children and new requiremen­ts for parents on welfare to place their children in preschool education from age 3.

Nelson kindergart­en teacher Virginia Oakly, who led the children’s group at Parliament, said almost all the higher early childhood spending since 2010 had gone on the quantity of children, rather than the quality of teaching and care.

“All the evidence shows that early childhood education has a powerful, positive impact on a child’s entire life, but only if it is of a really high quality,” she said.

Education Minister Hekia Parata said funding for ECE had increased each year under the National Government, and had more than doubled in the period since the 2007/2008 financial year to $1.8b in the 2016/17 financial year.

 ?? Picture /Mark Mitchell ?? Children from Wellington ECE centres with their heart-shaped “I'm Worth it” messages outside Parliament yesterday.
Picture /Mark Mitchell Children from Wellington ECE centres with their heart-shaped “I'm Worth it” messages outside Parliament yesterday.

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