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'Plan puts return to work before children'

Posted: 09 December 2004 | Subscribe Online


Measures in the government's 10-year child care strategy, published as part of the chancellor's pre-budget report, are more about getting parents into work than child development, a leading think-tank claimed last week.

Kate Stanley, head of social policy at the Institute for Public Policy Research, said that it had been widely expected that the strategy would include nursery places for two-year-olds but instead the number of hours of free child care for three and four year olds had been increased.
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By 2010, all three and four year olds will get 15 hours per week free child care for 38 weeks per year by 2010, up from the current provision of 12.5 hours per week for 33 weeks each year.

Stanley said that, by issuing extra hours, the government was giving parents more opportunity to get jobs. But research suggests that the most important time in most children's development is at around two years old, which could be stimulated by good quality part-time child care.

"The focus is slightly more on how can you get more parents into work rather than getting better outcomes for children," she said.


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