Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

CHILDCARE COSTS TO0 HIGH FOR MORE BABIES

- JULIE CROSS

PARENTS are choosing not to have any more children because the cost of childcare in Australia is so expensive.

Mum-of-two Amy Crisafulli, 35 said there was no way she and her husband Dan, 36, wanted “to endure this financial pain for another five years”.

“Ninety per cent of the decision not to have more children is the cost of childcare,” Mrs Crisafulli said.

“If it was more affordable we would.”

At one point the couple was paying almost $20,000 a year on childcare fees, on top of a $500,000 mortgage.

Benjamin Balk, founder and chief executive of Kindicare, a website and app that helps parents find the right childcare centre, said this was a sentiment he often heard.

“Mums are constantly telling us that they have delayed having a second child until their eldest is out of care and in school because the costs are crippling,” said Mr Balk.

It comes as more than 20,000 families have put their details into a clever election calculator on the Kindicare platforms, which works out their out-of-pocket costs depending on the policies of the major political parties.

He said there were around 1000 people a day inputting their details into the calculator ahead of the May 21 federal election.

He said a poll running alongside the calculator showed that the childcare policies of the major parties would affect the way 83.3 per cent of parents voted.

“The fact that 1,000 people a day are using the election calculator and more than 80 per cent of parents who participat­ed in our election poll said the childcare policies of the major parties would affect the way they vote in the May election, shows that childcare is a key battlegrou­nd that cannot be ignored,” Mr Balk said.

Data from the calculator showed that the average household income of families who used it was $157,486, under the $178,760 national average annual earnings for a male and female working full-time.

It found parents were paying $131.30 per day in long daycare fees per child, before subsidies, with children attending early learning services 3.3 days per week on average.

Mrs Crisafulli, who is a senior adviser in procuremen­t on the Gold Coast, and no relation to Queensland Opposition Leader David Crisafulli, said her husband was a profession­al musician who also worked in a music shop, working Saturdays, so he could look after their daughters on Fridays to save on childcare fees.

Their combined income was $155,000 last year.

She said when both of their daughters were in childcare three days a week, they were paying $500 a week.

Since the older daughter started school this year there had been some relief but they were still paying $260 a week out-of-pocket for one child in care four days a week and $60 a week for four sessions of before and after school care.

“It’s quite debilitati­ng as a young working family,” Mrs Crisafulli said.

“We just can’t seem to get ahead.”

 ?? ?? Amy Crisafulli, 35, and husband Dan, 36, with their two girls Eliza, 5, and Adalyn, 3. The couple say expensive childcare fees have played a major part in not having a third child. Picture: Zoe Rane Photograph­y
Craig Mann, P91
Amy Crisafulli, 35, and husband Dan, 36, with their two girls Eliza, 5, and Adalyn, 3. The couple say expensive childcare fees have played a major part in not having a third child. Picture: Zoe Rane Photograph­y Craig Mann, P91

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