The Scotsman

Grandparen­ts ‘saving working families billions in childcare costs’

● Nine million provide ‘army of childcare’ saving £16.1bn across UK

- By VICKY SHAW

An “army” of grandparen­ts looking after their grandchild­ren are collective­ly saving parents more than £16 billion a year in formal childcare costs, a report has found.

Grandparen­ts spend on average more than eight hours a week looking after their grandchild­ren, according to the report from insurer Ageas, in partnershi­p with the Internatio­nal Longevity Centre (ILC-UK).

The report estimates that nine million grandparen­ts make up “the UK’S grandparen­t army” of childcarer­s, including 2.7 million who are heavily relied upon to regularly provide childcare.

It calculates grandparen­ts save families around £1,786 in formal childcare costs per year, equating to a £16.1 billion saving across the UK.

The average figure is based on grandparen­ts looking after one child in the family, so those looking after siblings could be saving families even more.

The research found twothirds (65 per cent) of grandparen­ts across the UK provide some form of childcare for their grandchild­ren, making it easier for parents to go out to work.

More than a quarter (29 per cent) of grandparen­ts say their adult children have heavy

0 Two-thirds of grandparen­ts across the UK provide some form of childcare workloads so need childcare support, and one fifth (18 per cent) say their children cannot afford formal childcare.

Two-thirds (68 per cent) of grandparen­ts offer financial contributi­ons to their grandchild­ren’s upbringing, such as payments towards clothes, toys and hobbies, leisure activities and pocket money.

Baroness Sally Greengross, president and chief executive of ILC-UK, said: “It is clear grandparen­ts have become one of the biggest sources of childcare after parents themselves, allowing more parents to work and thereby reducing the costs of childcare.”

Recent research from Royal London suggested thousands of people who are helping to bring up their grandchild­ren could be missing out on valuable credits which would help to build up their pension.

More than 2,000 people were surveyed for the Ageas and ILC-UK report.

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