Community Care logo
Loading
E-Newsletters
Inform image
You are in:   News

Higher income families are receiving a disproportionate share of subsidised child care, a new study has revealed.

Friday 29 August 2003 10:44

Higher income families are receiving a disproportionate share of subsidised child care, a new study has revealed.

Families living on lower incomes are much more likely to rely on more informal services, such as nannies, friends and family, which are not eligible for subsidy even when parents have to pay for them, according to research carried out by the Policy Studies Institute.

The research, commissioned by the Department for Work and Pensions and based on the Families and Children Survey 2001, finds that 57 per cent of pre-school children and 12 per cent of school-age children with parents who worked at managerial or professional jobs were placed into child care eligible for financial assistance, compared to 22 per cent and 3 per cent respectively of children whose parents worked at manual jobs.

Thirty nine per cent of mothers who were working full time (defined as 16 hours a week or more) were paying for their child care. Of these, just under a third (30 per cent) were relying on, and paying for "ineligible" care - child care that did not qualify for financial assistance.

The report says: "This finding presents a challenge to policies which aim to increase eligible child care placements for lower income working families with the added incentive of a tax credit. It appears that those forms of child care which qualify for support from the government are disproportionately being taken up by families who do not necessarily qualify for the child care tax credit."

Overall, the survey found a small rise in the use of eligible child care provision between 2000 and 2001. Among low-income couples in particular, the use of eligible nurseries, registered childminders and after-school or holiday schemes increased.

The survey also found that hardship, as measured by counting 40 "essential items", did fall for out of work families between 1999 and 2001. Increased income support and child benefit rates since 1999, led to decreased severe hardship among out-of-work families by more than 40 per cent.

- Families and Children 2001: Work and Childcare by Diana Kasparova, et al. Summary available at www.dwp.gov.uk/asd/asd5/191summ.pdf and Families and Children 2001: Living Standards and the Children by Sandra Vegeris and Jane Perry. Summary available at www.dwp.gov.uk/asd/asd5/190summ.pdf

blog comments powered by Disqus
 
More from Community Care
Trending now logo
 
 
Social care link

 

    Transcare