Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
The Family and Childcare Trust briefs MPs and peers on legislation and policy issues affecting families.
These briefings are also helpful for anyone who wants a summary of the evidence, research findings and subsequent recommendations on key areas of family and children policy.
- Schools in the UK are facing budget cuts and increased costs, forcing some like Tadcaster Grammar in Yorkshire to ask parents for voluntary monthly contributions between £5-£50 to help cover costs.
- Budget cuts mean schools must find an extra £1,100 per teacher to cover rising pension and national insurance costs. If all parents at Tadcaster Grammar agreed to maximum donations of £75 per month per child, it could provide the school an extra £1.35 million annually.
- The National Association of Head Teachers warns that two-thirds of school leaders will be unable to balance their budgets by 2019 without more government funding, as schools face difficult decisions to address shortfalls.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
The Family and Childcare Trust briefs MPs and peers on legislation and policy issues affecting families.
These briefings are also helpful for anyone who wants a summary of the evidence, research findings and subsequent recommendations on key areas of family and children policy.
- Schools in the UK are facing budget cuts and increased costs, forcing some like Tadcaster Grammar in Yorkshire to ask parents for voluntary monthly contributions between £5-£50 to help cover costs.
- Budget cuts mean schools must find an extra £1,100 per teacher to cover rising pension and national insurance costs. If all parents at Tadcaster Grammar agreed to maximum donations of £75 per month per child, it could provide the school an extra £1.35 million annually.
- The National Association of Head Teachers warns that two-thirds of school leaders will be unable to balance their budgets by 2019 without more government funding, as schools face difficult decisions to address shortfalls.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
Over the last Parliament the cost of a part-time nursery place for a child under two has increased by 32.8 per cent. A family paying for this type of care now spends £1,533 more this year than they did in 2010, while wages have remained largely static.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Access denied: A report on childcare sufficiency and market management in Eng...Family and Childcare Trust
Childcare provision is a crucial part of a modern state’s
infrastructure: it enables parents to work, improves
children’s outcomes and helps narrow the gap
between disadvantaged children and their peers. The
importance of childcare is now recognised and over
the last 20 years there have been many policy changes
that have aimed to make childcare more affordable
for families, through free early education, tax credits,
vouchers and the new tax-free childcare scheme. Most
recently, the Government has announced that it will
double the hours of free early education for three and
four year olds, with working parents offered 30 hours
per week by 2017. But over the years officials and
decision-makers have given less attention to the other
side of the childcare conundrum - the availability of
childcare. Today, shortages of early education places
in some areas are putting the Government’s new
childcare plans in jeopardy.
In its 21st birthday year, Daycare Trust has published a 21-point plan outlining the next steps towards universal, affordable childcare for all in the UK. The plan calls for improvements to childcare quality, affordability, and choices for parents. Daycare Trust is asking the government to take actions like increasing free early years places and extending tax credits to make childcare accessible for families across the country.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Barnardos Key Recommendations for Budget 2010Darragh Doyle
From the Barnardos Ireland YES/NO campaign, a presentation on what Barnardos are asking the Irish Government to consider in the upcoming budget. For more see http://www.barnardos.ie/yesno
1) Sweden has developed an "earner-carer" model of family policy since the 1970s with major reforms to parental leave, public daycare, taxation, and family law.
2) Key Swedish reforms include expanding paid parental leave to one year and allocating some of it specifically for fathers, expanding public daycare coverage, and individualizing the income tax system.
3) Family policies have emerged gradually in different directions in countries, influenced by economic pressures, politics, and views of gender roles. Long-term changes can be seen in the generosity of family policy benefits oriented towards dual-earners and carers.
Paediatrics - Single Parents Community case scenariopatrickcouret
This document discusses single parents in the UK. It defines a single parent as someone who lives alone with their children and is solely responsible for their care. Approximately 1 in 4 families with children in the UK are single-parent families, with most single parents being mothers. Single parents often face financial difficulties, with nearly half living below the poverty line. Benefits are available to support single parents, but may still leave them struggling on a low income to support themselves and their children. The lives of single parents can involve stress from the responsibilities of parenting alone and financial pressures.
Nearly 1 in 4 people in Wales live in relative income poverty, defined as having an income less than 60% of the UK median income. Children have the highest rates of poverty at 28%, likely because parents with children are more likely to be out of work or in low-paying jobs. The percentage of pensioners in poverty has been rising in Wales but remains below levels seen in the 1990s. 10% of children in Wales live in material deprivation and low-income households, defined as having income under 70% of the UK median.
This newsletter provides information for those working in youth services in Devon. It announces changes to the UK government department responsible for education and children's services. It also provides notices of job vacancies, training courses, funding opportunities and other news relevant to youth work in the region, such as programs to address youth unemployment and support young fathers.
The Department for Work and Pensions produces data on children in material deprivation and low income households by area. This is done on a before housing costs basis.
The Department for Work and Pensions define an individual as in persistent poverty if he or she is in relative income poverty in at least 3 out of 4 consecutive years.
The Department for Work and Pensions produces data on children in material deprivation and low income households by area. This is done on a before housing costs basis.
Governor Cooper has provided $50 million in flexible funding and budget flexibility to North Carolina public schools to address expenses related to COVID-19, such as remote learning, school nutrition, cleaning, and child care. The funding comes from unused carryover funds, unspent summer reading camp money, and emergency relief funds. Schools can now use existing allotments for devices, online resources, and staff training for remote learning, as well as for nutrition, child care, cleaning, protective equipment, and remote learning support. Guidance on allowable expenses and coding will be provided by the Department of Public Instruction.
The England Experience – Naomi EisenstaedtCare Connect
The document discusses England's policies around early childhood from 1997-2010, including supporting parents through reducing pressures, enhancing capabilities, and intervening to safeguard children. Key themes were reducing child poverty and gaps in outcomes, evidence-based policy, and universal services with extra support for disadvantaged families. Recent policies focused on early intervention, redefining poverty, local control over services, and addressing high childcare costs, but cuts risk increasing child poverty. An ideal future system provides universal family support services adapted locally.
Nearly 1 in 4 people in Wales live in relative income poverty after paying housing costs, according to statistics from 2016-2017 to 2018-2019. Children are the most affected age group, with 28% living in poverty. For working-age adults the rate is 22% and for pensioners it is 19%, though pensioner poverty has been rising in recent years. Rates of relative income poverty in Wales have remained steady but are generally higher than in other parts of the UK.
Families in the UK spend on average £369 annually on transportation to and from school, and the total cost of sending a child to state school averages over £33,500. Additional expenses include £186 per year per child on uniforms and shoes, £379 per year on packed lunches and school meals, and £59 per year per child on sports kits. Over a quarter of parents have purchased an educational tablet for their children. Out of school care costs average families £558 per child per year. Having the right family protection in place, such as income protection or critical illness coverage, can provide peace of mind for parents that their family's lifestyle can continue with as little disruption as possible should unfortunate circumstances occur.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Increasing numbers of parents do not have a standard nine-to-five job; they may work shifts, have zero-hour contracts, unforeseen overtime or other unpredictable hours. These atypical work patterns can present childcare challenges, if partners or relatives cannot provide informal childcare. Two of our reports examine the scale of these challenges and present solutions to help meet this specific childcare need.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
This document discusses the work of Family Information Services in England. It finds that while most FIS are providing a high quality service, a minority are underperforming and not meeting standards. Key findings include that FIS are answering an estimated 430,000 inquiries annually, but 58% have faced budget cuts in the last 18 months and 52% expect further cuts. The document concludes with recommendations, including ensuring all FIS comply with legal duties, improving online information, and retaining specialized FIS staff when services are merged into call centers.
Over the last Parliament the cost of a part-time nursery place for a child under two has increased by 32.8 per cent. A family paying for this type of care now spends £1,533 more this year than they did in 2010, while wages have remained largely static.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Access denied: A report on childcare sufficiency and market management in Eng...Family and Childcare Trust
Childcare provision is a crucial part of a modern state’s
infrastructure: it enables parents to work, improves
children’s outcomes and helps narrow the gap
between disadvantaged children and their peers. The
importance of childcare is now recognised and over
the last 20 years there have been many policy changes
that have aimed to make childcare more affordable
for families, through free early education, tax credits,
vouchers and the new tax-free childcare scheme. Most
recently, the Government has announced that it will
double the hours of free early education for three and
four year olds, with working parents offered 30 hours
per week by 2017. But over the years officials and
decision-makers have given less attention to the other
side of the childcare conundrum - the availability of
childcare. Today, shortages of early education places
in some areas are putting the Government’s new
childcare plans in jeopardy.
In its 21st birthday year, Daycare Trust has published a 21-point plan outlining the next steps towards universal, affordable childcare for all in the UK. The plan calls for improvements to childcare quality, affordability, and choices for parents. Daycare Trust is asking the government to take actions like increasing free early years places and extending tax credits to make childcare accessible for families across the country.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Barnardos Key Recommendations for Budget 2010Darragh Doyle
From the Barnardos Ireland YES/NO campaign, a presentation on what Barnardos are asking the Irish Government to consider in the upcoming budget. For more see http://www.barnardos.ie/yesno
1) Sweden has developed an "earner-carer" model of family policy since the 1970s with major reforms to parental leave, public daycare, taxation, and family law.
2) Key Swedish reforms include expanding paid parental leave to one year and allocating some of it specifically for fathers, expanding public daycare coverage, and individualizing the income tax system.
3) Family policies have emerged gradually in different directions in countries, influenced by economic pressures, politics, and views of gender roles. Long-term changes can be seen in the generosity of family policy benefits oriented towards dual-earners and carers.
Paediatrics - Single Parents Community case scenariopatrickcouret
This document discusses single parents in the UK. It defines a single parent as someone who lives alone with their children and is solely responsible for their care. Approximately 1 in 4 families with children in the UK are single-parent families, with most single parents being mothers. Single parents often face financial difficulties, with nearly half living below the poverty line. Benefits are available to support single parents, but may still leave them struggling on a low income to support themselves and their children. The lives of single parents can involve stress from the responsibilities of parenting alone and financial pressures.
Nearly 1 in 4 people in Wales live in relative income poverty, defined as having an income less than 60% of the UK median income. Children have the highest rates of poverty at 28%, likely because parents with children are more likely to be out of work or in low-paying jobs. The percentage of pensioners in poverty has been rising in Wales but remains below levels seen in the 1990s. 10% of children in Wales live in material deprivation and low-income households, defined as having income under 70% of the UK median.
This newsletter provides information for those working in youth services in Devon. It announces changes to the UK government department responsible for education and children's services. It also provides notices of job vacancies, training courses, funding opportunities and other news relevant to youth work in the region, such as programs to address youth unemployment and support young fathers.
The Department for Work and Pensions produces data on children in material deprivation and low income households by area. This is done on a before housing costs basis.
The Department for Work and Pensions define an individual as in persistent poverty if he or she is in relative income poverty in at least 3 out of 4 consecutive years.
The Department for Work and Pensions produces data on children in material deprivation and low income households by area. This is done on a before housing costs basis.
Governor Cooper has provided $50 million in flexible funding and budget flexibility to North Carolina public schools to address expenses related to COVID-19, such as remote learning, school nutrition, cleaning, and child care. The funding comes from unused carryover funds, unspent summer reading camp money, and emergency relief funds. Schools can now use existing allotments for devices, online resources, and staff training for remote learning, as well as for nutrition, child care, cleaning, protective equipment, and remote learning support. Guidance on allowable expenses and coding will be provided by the Department of Public Instruction.
The England Experience – Naomi EisenstaedtCare Connect
The document discusses England's policies around early childhood from 1997-2010, including supporting parents through reducing pressures, enhancing capabilities, and intervening to safeguard children. Key themes were reducing child poverty and gaps in outcomes, evidence-based policy, and universal services with extra support for disadvantaged families. Recent policies focused on early intervention, redefining poverty, local control over services, and addressing high childcare costs, but cuts risk increasing child poverty. An ideal future system provides universal family support services adapted locally.
Nearly 1 in 4 people in Wales live in relative income poverty after paying housing costs, according to statistics from 2016-2017 to 2018-2019. Children are the most affected age group, with 28% living in poverty. For working-age adults the rate is 22% and for pensioners it is 19%, though pensioner poverty has been rising in recent years. Rates of relative income poverty in Wales have remained steady but are generally higher than in other parts of the UK.
Families in the UK spend on average £369 annually on transportation to and from school, and the total cost of sending a child to state school averages over £33,500. Additional expenses include £186 per year per child on uniforms and shoes, £379 per year on packed lunches and school meals, and £59 per year per child on sports kits. Over a quarter of parents have purchased an educational tablet for their children. Out of school care costs average families £558 per child per year. Having the right family protection in place, such as income protection or critical illness coverage, can provide peace of mind for parents that their family's lifestyle can continue with as little disruption as possible should unfortunate circumstances occur.
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Increasing numbers of parents do not have a standard nine-to-five job; they may work shifts, have zero-hour contracts, unforeseen overtime or other unpredictable hours. These atypical work patterns can present childcare challenges, if partners or relatives cannot provide informal childcare. Two of our reports examine the scale of these challenges and present solutions to help meet this specific childcare need.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
This document discusses the work of Family Information Services in England. It finds that while most FIS are providing a high quality service, a minority are underperforming and not meeting standards. Key findings include that FIS are answering an estimated 430,000 inquiries annually, but 58% have faced budget cuts in the last 18 months and 52% expect further cuts. The document concludes with recommendations, including ensuring all FIS comply with legal duties, improving online information, and retaining specialized FIS staff when services are merged into call centers.
A two-part report published in February 2004. Part one details and analyses the results of a MORI poll, which found that 84% of parents felt that companies targeted their children too much. It also sets out the Family and Parenting Institute’s recommendations and looks at how other countries approach the issue. Part two presents the full report of a conference on marketing to children, which brought together opinion formers and policy makers in an open debate on the topic.
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust collects statistics about childcare costs and availability in Britain.
Our data – collected from local authority Family Information Services – makes it possible to monitor changes in childcare costs and supply from year to year.
All our reports are widely used by policymakers and academics in all parts of the UK and beyond.
The poll Time to care: generation generosity under pressure shows that grandparents have given a total of £8 billion in the past year to pay for a range of grandchildren’s needs, and that nearly two million grandparents have given up a job, reduced their hours or taken time off work to look after their grandchildren.
The Ipsos MORI report, Family Matters, followed eleven families feeling the strain from depressed incomes, rising living costs and cuts to benefits and services. The report provides insight into the lived experiences of modern families away from the policy and political debates that dominate discourse about families. The key drivers of family fragility – whether financial, emotional, relational or physical – were the four C’s: cost of living, cars, credit and childcare.
An Institute for Fiscal Studies report, commissioned by the Family and Parenting Institute, was the first to reveal the impact of national austerity measures and welfare reform on family income and prospects for poverty rates and income for different family types up to the year 2015.
This document reviews literature on conceptualizing and measuring family wellbeing. It finds that while family wellbeing is widely discussed, there is no consensus on how to define or measure it. The review examines theoretical models of family wellbeing and approaches to measurement. It concludes that comprehensive, longitudinal data is needed to understand family wellbeing and the impact of policies, but such data is currently lacking in the UK. Representing both objective and subjective dimensions across multiple domains would ideally capture how various factors interact to influence family functioning over time.
Local authorities in England and Wales are required by law to provide family information services to help parents find childcare and access other support services. However, 88% of local authorities have cut budgets for these services, jeopardizing their quality. Many are merging family information services into general call centers undermining important functions like outreach and helping parents find suitable childcare placements. The legal duties of family information services and the support they provide parents are being threatened by budget cuts and service changes.
The 2011 Report Card edition of the report card highlights the scale of the government’s challenge in delivering the Prime Minister’s commitment to make the UK the most family friendly country in Europe. The report shows how tough making the UK family friendly is given the economic climate and considerable squeeze on public and family finances.
There has been an impassioned debate about children’s wellbeing in Britain since a 2007 UNICEF report on the subject put the UK at the bottom of a list of 21 rich countries.
In our report, we use data from the 2005 Families and Children Study (FACS) to look at England, Scotland and Wales, and compare income and wellbeing indicators in all three countries.
Adjusted incomes (for what families can buy with it) are slightly smaller for Child poverty is greater in England than in Scotland and Wales, and low incomepoorer families tend to have slightly lower purchasing power, and child poverty is greater in England than in Scotland and Wales, but England fares better than its smaller neighbours when it comes to key wellbeing indicators, such as health, housing and child behaviour.
We argue that, when comparing different countries on the British mainland, income by itself is not the best measure of children's wellbeing.
This document discusses childcare in London and argues for investing in the system. It notes that London has a higher percentage of families with young children than other parts of the UK. The costs of childcare in London are among the highest in the country, creating barriers for parents who want to work. Improving access to affordable, flexible childcare would benefit families and London's economy by allowing more parents to join the workforce. The document examines current childcare funding and costs borne by parents, providers and the government. It argues that expanding childcare availability would require involvement from multiple sectors but could increase parental employment and overall spending on early education.
This document provides a report card on how family friendly the UK is based on analysis of policy, statistics, and a survey of parents. It examines how families are faring in terms of income and poverty, employment, and public services like education, healthcare, and social care. While most parents are satisfied with public services, many families feel the financial squeeze of stagnant wages and rising costs of living. Access to affordable childcare, flexible work opportunities, and extra-curricular activities are identified as areas needing improvement to better support families.
Daycare Trust is a national childcare charity that has worked for over 20 years to promote high quality and affordable childcare. It conducts research on childcare costs and availability, campaigns on childcare issues, and provides information services to parents and childcare providers. In 2010, Daycare Trust continued its influential research and policy work, political engagement, events including an annual conference, and expert information services while adapting to a new government and economic environment.
About a third of UK families use informal (unregulated) childcare from grandparents, other relatives, friends and babysitters. However, little is known about informal childcare or the factors that are associated with its use. From 2010-2012, we undertook a two-year study of informal childcare, with funding from the Big Lottery.
London is the richest region in the UK, but nearly a quarter of its children live in poverty. Just 63.3 per cent of mothers with dependent children are employed in London in 2013, compared with 72.9 per cent in the rest of the UK. The state of childcare provision in the capital is a major cause of these economic paradoxes. Childcare for the under-fives is 28 per cent more expensive than the British average. There are also major gaps in provision for all types of childcare, but they are particularly acute for those who work outside normal office hours or irregularly.
The Family and Childcare Trust’s London Childcare Report is its most detailed study to date on childcare in the capital, analysing childcare provision and costs, free childcare places, and whether London boroughs are meeting the childcare needs of working parents.
Coalition Prime Minister David Cameron pledged to make Britain a truly family friendly country. This pledge created an opportunity for the government to 'family-proof' its new policies, creating conditions that really help families thrive. However, as the 2010 Report Card shows, there is a considerable distance to go before this aspiration can be achieved.
The Families in the Age of Austerity final summary of the project draws these strands together, presenting a multi-dimensional picture of family life through an age of austerity. Through the report the Family and Childcare Trust also highlights a series of policy recommendations to help families cope with the pressures of austerity.
This document summarizes the findings of a survey of Family Information Services in England and Wales conducted by Daycare Trust and NAFIS. It finds that 88% of local authorities have cut budgets for family information services, jeopardizing their quality. Many services are being merged into call centers, undermining outreach and childcare brokerage duties required by law. The survey received responses from 118 family information services, representing 68% of local authorities. It found that services receive an average of 391 enquiries per month, though numbers vary greatly. Half of enquiries are by telephone, while some services have little face-to-face contact. Most services also track large numbers of website hits. The document examines the work and
About a third of UK families use informal (unregulated) childcare from grandparents, other relatives, friends and babysitters. However, little is known about informal childcare or the factors that are associated with its use. From 2010-2012, we undertook a two-year study of informal childcare, with funding from the Big Lottery.
This document summarizes key findings from multiple sources on various topics in less than 3 sentences each: 1) The average costs for a university degree in the UK, 2) Unpaid caregivers in England, 3) Family disadvantage in Glasgow, 4) Father-child contact after separation, 5) Attitudes toward welfare spending, 6) Free school meals and student attainment, 7) Trends in sexual behavior and partnerships over lifetimes, 8) Decline in walking as a form of travel, 9) Behavior of 11-15 year olds related to drinking, 10) Family financial support for first home purchases, and 11) Changing views on homosexuality in the UK since 1987.
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Financial adviser newsletters
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Bespoke publishing services
Financial adviser client marketing factsheets
Goldmine Media's professional financial adviser factsheets will enable your business to extend client communication, raise brand awareness, improve marketing efficiency, enhance client retention and increase sales.
Generate further repeat business opportunities
This service has been designed to generate further repeat business opportunities and referrals from your clients. Besides educating and informing clients, you're also achieving greater brand and name recognition, which is a very beneficial way to build lasting relationships.
Nurture relationships as part of your ongoing service proposition
In a post-RDR environment, there has never been a more important time to communicate with your clients on a regular basis, and each factsheet will ensure that you're able to nurture relationships as part of your ongoing client service proposition.
Each factsheet used as part of a direct mail campaign provides an unrivalled way of maintaining client contact and providing information that your clients know to be impartial, relevant and timely.
This invited presentation for the Institute of Health Visiting Leadership Conference gives a DPH view on the future of Child Public Health and the need for a systems approach
Family and Childcare Trust's annual review is a record of our achievements over the past financial year, including details of our funders, alongside details about our staff and members of our trustee board.
Family and Parenting Institute: the possibilities and limits of parentingAdfam
The document discusses the possibilities and limits of parenting. It notes that parenting makes a difference, but parents operate within contexts that are not always family-friendly. Parenting pressures are increasing due to financial stresses, time pressures, and changes to community and family structures. While policies aim to boost parenting capacity through classes and support, reducing broader pressures through economic and social policies may also be needed to truly make a difference. Sustainable parenting policy needs to both increase capacity and decrease pressures, using evidence-based approaches and new partnership models.
This document discusses child poverty in the UK. It begins by defining relative poverty as lacking resources to participate in customary activities of one's society. It then discusses trends in child poverty since the 1960s and compares UK rates to the EU. The majority of the document discusses the impacts of poverty on children, including missing out on activities, food insecurity, and health issues. It also discusses groups most at risk like single parents and larger families. The document advocates for policies and programs to reduce child poverty rates and mitigate its impacts, such as increasing benefits, early education programs, employment support, and local welfare assistance.
the choice of financial professionals
Print
Digital
Websites
Creative
Marketing
Personalised Client Marketing Factsheets
You may also be interested in
Financial adviser newsletters
Financial adviser client magazines
Personalised marketing factsheets
Financial adviser Corporate brochures
Personalised 2014/15 Tax Data card
Bespoke publishing services
Financial adviser client marketing factsheets
Goldmine Media's professional financial adviser factsheets will enable your business to extend client communication, raise brand awareness, improve marketing efficiency, enhance client retention and increase sales.
Generate further repeat business opportunities
This service has been designed to generate further repeat business opportunities and referrals from your clients. Besides educating and informing clients, you're also achieving greater brand and name recognition, which is a very beneficial way to build lasting relationships.
Nurture relationships as part of your ongoing service proposition
In a post-RDR environment, there has never been a more important time to communicate with your clients on a regular basis, and each factsheet will ensure that you're able to nurture relationships as part of your ongoing client service proposition.
Each factsheet used as part of a direct mail campaign provides an unrivalled way of maintaining client contact and providing information that your clients know to be impartial, relevant and timely.
There are around 6,300 children aged 0-4 and 11,300 children aged 5-14 in South West Norfolk. 22% of children lived in poverty in 2013. Childcare costs are similar to regional averages, though after-school and holiday care is generally cheaper and more expensive respectively. There are gaps in provision for holiday and two-year-old childcare as well as a decline in childminders impacting access to flexible care. Take-up of free early education for eligible two-year-olds is 76%, higher than regional and national rates.
This document discusses concerns about proposed changes in the Children and Families Bill that would allow childminders to register with childminder agencies rather than directly with Ofsted. Key points made include:
- Parents and childminders have voiced concerns that agency registration would reduce confidence in childcare quality and increase costs. Experience in other countries like the Netherlands shows agency models can lead to declining standards.
- Ofsted registration of individual childminders has improved standards and provides transparent quality information for parents. Agency monitoring may not provide consistent quality judgements.
- Agencies would have higher fixed costs than Ofsted and may pass these costs on to childminders and parents through higher fees.
- The number
Clause 76 poses a risk to the effectiveness of the Childcare Act duty on local authorities to provide sufficient childcare. Section 11 assessments are the mechanism through which local authorities meet the sufficiency duty, but their quality varies and many lack action plans. Repealing section 11 without replacement will weaken the duty. Maintaining but simplifying section 11 and providing detailed guidance, as local authorities requested, better addresses concerns while preserving the duty. Significant gaps in childcare remain, particularly for disadvantaged groups, limiting employment and development. An effective sufficiency duty framework remains important.
The Family and Childcare Trust briefs MPs and peers on legislation and policy issues affecting families.
These briefings are also helpful for anyone who wants a summary of the evidence, research findings and subsequent recommendations on key areas of family and children policy.
The Parliamentary Inquiry found that access to good quality, affordable childcare is particularly important for families with disabled children due to their increased risk of poverty. However, many families reported being unable to work due to a significant lack of suitable childcare options and higher costs of care for disabled children. The Inquiry heard that this lack of childcare forces some parents out of the workforce and others to work fewer hours than desired. Recommendations were made to address barriers to access, affordability, availability and inclusion of childcare for disabled children.
A wide-ranging examination of international research and other literature that analyses current definitions, theoretical models and measurement tools, and examines quality issues such as validity and transferability, as well as the conceptual and practical challenges of measuring family wellbeing. It considers whether existing datasets and surveys could be used for measuring family wellbeing and proposes future directions for such research in the UK. It also includes comprehensive appendices that detail the many concepts and measures that have been identified in the literature. Download can government measure family wellbeing report.
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1. Sponsored by
At a cost of £100 million a year to the UK economy, nearly a
million working days are lost as one in five parents are forced
away from work to cover childcare over the holidays.
29%
Jill Rutter and
Duncan Lugton
Holiday Childcare
Survey 2014
2. Family and Childcare Trust
Childcare Costs Survey 2014 02
Executive summary and
areas for action
Last summer I had to leave my 16 year old to look after my seven year old
because I couldn’t afford the childcare. Not great thing to do for either of them.
I just wish there were more jobs that offered school hours.
(Yasmin, mother of two).
Every year the Family and Childcare Trust conducts a
survey to gather information about the cost of holiday
childcare and its availability across Britain. The data
– collected from local authorities – makes it possible
to monitor changes in the costs and availability of
childcare during school holiday periods and identifies
differences in provision across the regions and nations
of Britain. This year we have also undertaken an
additional survey of parents, to help us understand their
experiences of holiday childcare. The results of both
surveys are included in this report which complements
our annual survey of childcare costs that we release
every spring.
This years’ Holiday Childcare Survey, the 13th in the
series, is released at a time of heightened debate
around the cost of childcare among politicians, as well
as the configuration of the school year. While some
parents are lucky and have access to high quality
affordable holiday childcare, our results show that
many families face a holiday childcare lottery of high
costs and patchy provision. Despite the legal obligations
to provide enough childcare for working parents, only
27 per cent of English local authorities and 6 per cent in
Wales have enough provision for this group of families
and these gaps have increased rather than decreased
since the implementation of the Childcare Act 2006. All
this takes a toll on families, with nearly one in five (17
per cent) of parents in our survey taking sick leave over
the holiday period in order to provide childcare.
Key findings
Childcare costs
► During the school holidays about one in five of all
families with children under 12 use holiday childcare
provided by holiday clubs or play schemes, with 78
per cent of this provision run by private, voluntary
and independent (PVI) organisations. The remaining
22 per cent of provision is run by local authorities,
schools and other maintained (public) sector
organisations.
► In Britain the average cost of one week’s full-time
(50 hours) of holiday childcare is now £114.51.
► The South East of England is the region with the
most expensive holiday childcare.
► The most expensive holiday club cost £530
per week.
► In all areas parents face large differences in
prices for holiday childcare, with an average price
difference of £111.22 per week between the
cheapest and the most expensive holiday childcare.
► Maintained sector provision cost an average of
£96.04 per week, compared with £118.65 per week
in the PVI sector. These price differences are a result
of subsidies and because holiday clubs provided by
local authorities and schools often have access to
free premises and equipment.
► Holiday childcare is 1.7 per cent more expensive
than in 2013. Prices have fallen by 3.1 per cent in the
maintained sector and risen by 2.7 per cent in the
PVI sector.
► Since 2009 the price of holiday childcare in the PVI
sector has risen by 21 per cent, with an increase of
17 per cent in the price of maintained provision.
The availability of holiday childcare
► Under the Childcare Act 2006 all local authorities
in England and Wales have a legal obligation to
ensure sufficient childcare for working parents and
those undertaking training. Despite this, only 27 per
cent of English local authorities and 6 per cent of
those in Wales had enough holiday childcare for
parents who worked full-time.
► Parents of children over 11, families who live in rural
areas and those with disabled children face the
most acute shortages of holiday childcare. Only 15
per cent of local authorities in England and 6 per
cent of those in Wales had enough childcare for
disabled children.
3. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 03
Executive summary and areas for action
► Gaps in provision have increased rather than
decreased since the implementation of the
Childcare Act 2006, with 49 per cent of English local
authorities having enough childcare for working
parents in 2009, compared with 27 per cent today.
► There has been a fall in the number of PVI providers
in 35 per cent of local authorities in England over
the last 12 months. This has been offset to a small
extent by a 24 per cent increase in school and local
authority provision since 2013, although this sector
generally offers less provision than the PVI sector.
► The legal duty on local authorities in Scotland to
ensure sufficient childcare is weaker than in England
and Wales. In Scotland only nine local authorities
out of the 26 that responded to the survey had
information about the sufficiency of their holiday
childcare.
Family experiences of holiday childcare
► Parents describe a holiday childcare lottery of large
differences in prices and gaps in provision, with
35 per cent of parents in our survey saying it was
difficult to find holiday childcare they could afford.
Some 28 per cent of parents reported difficulties
finding holiday childcare at a convenient location.
► Parents often found it hardest to cater for 12-14
year olds, who still require supervision, but for whom
holiday clubs may not be appropriate.
► Not all parents have employers who are
sympathetic to parents’ caring obligations, with
28 per cent of survey respondents reporting their
employer refusing a request to change work
arrangements over the holidays. The least-well
qualified parents were more likely to report an
unsympathetic boss, suggesting that more highly
qualified parents have greater negotiating power
with their employer.
► A lack of holiday childcare had forced parents into
courses of action that risked damaging their career
prospects and finances, with 25 per cent reporting
they had been forced to cut their hours of work
during school holidays. Some 12 per cent of parents
had given up a job because they could not find
holiday childcare.
► Some 17 per cent of parents said they had taken
days off sick to cover holiday childcare. One day
missed to cover childcare every year represents
over 900,000 lost working days and costs the UK
economy nearly £100 million every year.
Table One: The weekly cost of holiday childcare across Britain, 2014
Region/nation Maintained (school, local
authority) sector holiday
club or play scheme
Private, voluntary and
independent sector holiday
club or play scheme
Average
weighted
costs
East of England £92.81 £115.65 £111.13
East Midlands £100.92 £134.98 £128.44
Greater London £86.20 £124.34 £111.78
North East £97.10 £117.04 £114.68
North West £101.50 £105.50 £103.38
South East £113.08 £148.23 £140.88
South West £97.47 £116.20 £112.25
West Midlands £105.51 £108.64 £108.00
Yorkshire and Humberside £95.01 £116.41 £115.12
England (Regional Average) £98.79 £120.78 £116.18
Wales £63.75 £116.28 £109.66
Scotland £103.52 £101.87 £104.28
Britain average £96.04 £118.65 £114.51
Source: Family and Childcare Trust Holiday Childcare Survey, 2014
4. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 04
Executive summary and areas for action
Areas for action
Holiday childcare is an essential service for many
families, enabling them to juggle their caring
obligations, work and leave during the school holidays.
It also has a wider economic impact as it enables
parents to work and employers to have dependable
labour force who can be relied on to turn up for their
jobs. Despite the importance of holiday childcare, too
many families struggle to find local provision that they
can afford. This situation is not improving, rather, gaps
in provision are worsening, although there is a legal
duty on local authorities to ensure sufficient childcare.
While childcare has risen up the political agenda, the
focus has been on the under-fives. The results of our
2014 surveys have led us to conclude that the childcare
needs of families with school-age children must be
given higher priority. The Family and Childcare Trust
calls on the Government to consider these areas
for action:
► The Government should take action to ensure
that all parents benefit from family friendly work
by putting in place an information campaign for
parents on their rights and entitlements at work.
► Where there is insufficient holiday childcare, central
government should help local authorities fill these
gaps and work with parents hold them to account if
they fail to do so.
► In England, local authorities and the Education
Funding Agency should work with schools to make
sure their premises and facilities are used to provide
childcare and activities over holiday periods.
► In England, the Department for Education should
work with the Department for Culture, Media and
Sport and the Home Office to ensure sufficient de
facto childcare for older children.
► We call for similar action in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland.
► The Government should commit to a new childcare
strategy covering under-fives and children of school
age. As part of this, it should set up an independent
review of childcare funding that delivers the
affordable and accessible childcare that parents
and employers need.
After working hard and getting
promoted I am now worse off
because I don’t get tax credits
(Helen, mother of two).
I work in education so it’s a bit easier
for me but I still have problems as I
don’t have the same holiday times
as my kids if it wasn’t for my mum I
wouldn’t cope (Kate, mother of three).
5. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 05
Background
The summer holidays are just a nightmare. I can’t afford a holiday club for more
than a week, so we have to cobble together childcare for the other five weeks.
We take a week’s holiday then me and my husband share out our remaining
leave. The kids go to their grandparents, but that still leaves us a week to cover.
It’s stressful and expensive and I worry about getting overdrawn in August
(Nina, mother of two).
School holidays, particularly the long summer holidays,
present challenges to working parents. Schools and
school-based nurseries are closed and parents resort
to many different strategies to find childcare in the
holidays. A lucky few have employers who support
flexible working, for example, term-time only contracts.
Many parents also resort to ‘shift parenting’ where they
split their own annual leave and take it in turns to look
after their children. Informal childcare from relatives
and friends is also important, with the most recent
Childcare and Early Years Survey of Parents showing
that 41 per cent of working families with children under
15 used informal childcare over the school holidays,
most usually provided by grandparents (Department
for Education, 2014a).
But not all families can rely on shift parenting or
informal childcare provided by relatives and friends.
About a quarter of parents also use formal childcare
during the holiday period, in the form of childminders
and holiday clubs that provide activities for nine or
ten hours every day. For older children, open access
play schemes, sports camps and holiday activities run
by museums, orchestras, theatre projects and other
cultural organisations often function as de
facto childcare.
The importance of affordable formal holiday childcare
has been recognised by successive governments
which have acted to make holiday childcare more
affordable and more available to working parents. In
6. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 06
Background
1998 the National Childcare Strategy1
committed the
Government to increasing the availability and
affordability of early childhood education and childcare
in England and Wales. A further ten-year childcare
strategy was published in 2004 which paved the way
for the Childcare Act 2006. This legislation obliges all
English and Welsh local authorities to ensure that there
is sufficient childcare for working parents and those
undertaking training or education with the intention of
returning to work. Wales has also had its own Childcare
Strategies. At present there is no equivalent legislation in
Scotland, although the Early Years’ Framework (2008)
requires that local authorities have ‘a strategic view of
childcare accessibility’ and has a longer-term objective
that families have ‘access to integrated pre-school and
childcare services in every community matched to an
assessment of local demand’.
As a consequence of this action, the number of
childcare places has expanded dramatically in all parts
of Britain. By 2011 there were 339,300 holiday childcare
places delivered by 7,900 providers in England. This
represents a 179 per cent increase in places and a 182
per cent rise in the number of providers since 2003
when there were just 121,700 places.
Alongside moves to increase the availability of
childcare, a number of initiatives have also helped
make childcare more affordable. The current
infrastructure of support includes the subsidy of
parents’ childcare costs through the childcare element
of Working Tax Credit. In April 2014 an estimated
eight per cent of UK families with dependent children
under 12 – 436,000 families in total - received help
with their childcare costs this through the tax credit
system (HMRC, 2014). At present working parents on
low incomes can receive up to 70 per cent of their
childcare costs through the childcare element of
Working Tax Credit, up to a maximum cost of £175
per week for one child in childcare and £300 per week
for two or more children. This means that a family can
receive up to £122.50 help with childcare costs for one
child and up to £210 for two or more children. These
levels were set in 2005 and have not been uprated
since then, despite big increases in childcare costs
over this period. Moreover, it is only the most deprived
working families that receive this type of help, as the
childcare payment starts to taper off steeply if the first
earner in a household earns more than £15,910 per
1 Department for Education and Employment and Department for
Social Security, 1998.
year before tax and National Insurance are deduced.
After this threshold, the level of tax credit support is
reduced by 41 pence for every additional £1 that is
earned. This means that there are many families on
modest incomes - £25,000 - £35,000 gross household
income per year - who are getting little or no help with
their childcare costs through the childcare element of
Working Tax Credit.
Another problem with the childcare element of
Working Tax Credit is that the support system does
not work well for parents whose childcare costs or
incomes vary from week to week. Changes in salaries,
or increases in childcare costs, as often happens
during the school holidays, have to be reported to
HMRC. This can be demanding for parents with low
levels of literacy or limited fluency in English. In the past
the HMRC has made mistakes in deciding tax credit
payments and in April 2014 there were still 1.15 million
live cases of underpayment or overpayment of tax
credits, with many of them relating to childcare costs
(HMRC, 2014).
Tax credits are now being merged into the single
Universal Credit. Within Universal Credit the overall
maximum support levels for childcare costs of £175 or
£300 per week will remain, although these will be now
calculated monthly. However, in April 2016 all families
receiving Universal Credit will get up to 85 per cent of
their childcare costs paid, up from 70 per cent today.
Universal Credit will also be administered online and
these two changes will enable greater flexibility for
parents whose childcare costs fluctuate from week to
week. This is particularly important for parents who pay
for holiday childcare.
At present parents not in receipt of the childcare
element of Working Tax Credits are entitled to
help with their childcare costs through employer-
supported vouchers. About 9 per cent of UK families
get help with their childcare costs this way (House of
Commons Library, 2014). Those receiving childcare
vouchers can save up to £55 per week if they
are basic rate taxpayers or higher rate taxpayers
who joined a voucher scheme before 5 April 2011.
Childcare vouchers can also be ‘banked’ and used
at a time when childcare costs may be particularly
high, for example, during the school holidays. The
disadvantages of childcare vouchers are that only
five per cent of employers offer them and not all
childcare providers, particularly out-of-school clubs,
accept them.
7. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 07
Background
In 2013 the Government announced that it intends
to phase out the present employer-supported
childcare voucher scheme and replace it with a tax
free ‘voucher’ of up to £2,000 per year in 2015 (HM
Treasury, 2013). This will be an online system where
parents bank their payments. For each £8 a parent
pays in, the Government will add an additional £2 up
to a maximum of £2,000 per year per child. In the 2014
Budget it was confirmed that this source of help would
be open to all families with children under 12. This
support will be available to all families outside the tax
credit/Universal Credit system where parents work and
whose gross household income is less than £300,000
per year (or £150,000 for a single parent).
This new help with childcare costs is welcome,
although it will be families in the top half of the income
distribution who will benefit most from this new voucher
scheme. It may also cause more rapid price increases
for parents as hard-pressed providers see extra money
in parents’ pockets as a chance to increase costs (Ben-
Galim, 2014).
Alongside these proposals about holiday childcare
there have been other social policy changes that have
the potential to impact on holiday childcare. In all parts
of Britain there is now discussion about the role of
schools in providing childcare, prompted commitments
to increasing school-based childcare from both the UK
Government and the Labour party, as well as greater
numbers of academies and free schools that offer
these services to parents. From 2015 all schools in
England will be able to set their own term and holiday
dates, although the school year will still have to have
a minimum 190 days of term time. Already, a number
of schools have announced that they intend to cut the
summer holidays back to four weeks in order to help
parents who struggle with childcare. However, some
educational leaders are suggesting that this move
may increase parents’ childcare difficulties by
introducing variations in holiday dates within the
same local authority. Clearly, this is an area that
requires close monitoring.
These changes should also be seen against a backdrop
of spending cuts to local authority budgets. In many
parts of the country holiday childcare has been
partly subsidised by local authorities – often to ensure
that children are not left unsupervised over school
holidays – and differing levels of subsidies account for
some of the differences between holiday childcare
costs between local authorities. However, pressure
on budgets means that these subsidies have often
been reduced or removed completely in some areas.
Additionally, public funding for sports, cultural, open
access play schemes and youth activities, which often
act as substitute childcare for older children, has also
seen significant cuts. The Family and Childcare Trust’s
annual holiday childcare report is set in context of
these policy changes.
8. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 08
Methodology
The Family and Childcare Trust has carried out an
annual survey of holiday childcare since 2002. The
research, which examines costs and supply, is based on
a survey to local authorities. This year we made some
changes to the holiday childcare research methodology.
In addition to the survey to local authorities we
undertook an additional survey of parents and made
some case study visits to holiday childcare schemes.
The local authority survey was sent out in May 2014 to
all Family Information Services in England and Wales
and all Childcare Information Services in Scotland. They
were asked to complete a short questionnaire about
the average price of holiday childcare projects in their
area. The survey asked the price for group childcare,
that is holiday clubs or play schemes. Some parents
use childminders over the school holidays, but this
survey did not look at their prices, as we already have
already examined this in the Annual Childcare Costs
Survey that we publish each spring.
The questionnaire asked for the average daily and
weekly cost for full-time holiday childcare and the
number of hours over which this care was provided.
A distinction was made between maintained sector
holiday childcare (local authority, school and other
public sector) and childcare run by private, voluntary
and independent (PVI) providers. It is important to
emphasise that this survey asks local authorities to
report the price that parents pay for different forms of
childcare in their area. This survey does not ask local
authorities to estimate what services cost providers
to deliver – this is likely to be a different amount than
the prices information held because of subsidies and
grants that some providers receive. Thus, this data
cannot be used to represent the cost to providers of
delivering holiday childcare provision.
We used the data about the cost of holiday childcare
to calculate average regional weekly prices for
maintained sector and PVI provision in England and
average national prices for Scotland and Wales. We
also calculated overall regional and national prices by
weighting our figures for maintained sector and PVI
provision. In England, Scotland and Wales most holiday
childcare provision is run by the PVI sectors, although
the proportions varies between local authorities. As
Table One shows, childcare that is delivered by the PVI
sector tends to be more expensive than that run by
schools and local authorities. Our weighting formula
takes into account the greater prominence of the PVI
sector in delivering holiday childcare and enables us to
come up with a more precise calculation of average
holiday childcare costs.
As noted above, the Childcare Act 2006 obliges local
authorities in England and Wales to ensure that there
is sufficient childcare for working parents and those
studying with the intention of returning to work. At the
beginning of 2014 there was no equivalent legislation
in Scotland, although the 2008 Early Years’ Framework
requires that local authorities have ‘a strategic view of
childcare accessibility’ and has a longer-term objective
that families have ‘access to integrated pre-school and
childcare services in every community matched to an
assessment of local demand’ (Scottish Government,
2008). In order to monitor whether local authorities
are fulfilling these obligations, the survey asks whether
there is sufficient holiday childcare for different groups
of children: 4-7 year olds, 8-11 year olds, children aged
12 and over, disabled children, those living in rural areas
and the children of working parents.
In order to ensure an adequate response rate in all the
regions and nations of Britain, Freedom of Information
Act requests were used to collect the information
where the survey methodology had failed. Responses
were eventually received from 177 local authorities
across England, Scotland and Wales, representing an
87 per cent response rate overall and a minimum of
75 per cent response rate in each region or nation
of Britain.
While holiday childcare represents a significant
financial outlay to parents, it is inaccurate to argue that
these prices are merely the result of childcare providers
charging high fees to hard-pressed parents. Holiday
childcare will always be expensive as it is labour
intensive service. We felt that it is important to describe
the activities of high quality holiday childcare providers
in this report, and for this reason we made two field
visits to holiday childcare projects.
We also wanted to understand the experiences of
families in their search for holiday childcare. To this
end we undertook an online survey of parents in
May 2014 in partnership with Netmums, the UK’s
biggest parenting website. The survey probed family
caring strategies over the school holidays, childcare
expenditure and sources of financial help. It also looked
at the ease of finding affordable holiday childcare
at a location that was convenient, as well as the
impact on families when holiday childcare was not
available. Some 1,587 responses were received, with
the educational profile of the respondents broadly
corresponding with the overall population.
9. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 09
Holiday childcare provision
Finding suitable activities for mid-teens is difficult. They are too young to be
left for a long time on their own but too old for childminders and clubs (Ronnie,
father of two).
As noted above, parents use a mixture of informal
and formal childcare over the school holidays. Their
caring arrangements usually comprise a ‘package’ of
parental care, shift-parenting, informal childcare from
relatives and friends, as well as formal provision offered
by childminders and holiday clubs. The 2014 Childcare
and Early Years Survey of Parents indicated 26 per
cent of working parents used formal childcare during
the school holidays (Department for Education, 2014a).
The same survey shows that about 21 per cent used
holiday clubs. Some parents also turn to registered
childminders in addition to, or as an alternative to
holiday clubs – childminders often have vacancies over
the school holidays when their regular attenders are
away. Childminder provision is most frequently used by
families with children under eight. Parents may also use
sports, cultural and youth work activities as de facto
childcare, for older children for whom holiday clubs are
not suitable, but who still need some supervision.
This survey looks at group-based holiday childcare,
variously termed holiday play schemes, clubs or holiday
projects. Most of them book in children on a daily or
weekly basis, but a few are ‘open access’ which is drop
in provision where children can turn up and undertake
supervised play for as many hours as they wish.
We visited two holiday childcare projects: the
Winchester Project in Swiss Cottage, London and
Lewes YMCA in East Sussex. Both are voluntary sector
organisations that run holiday childcare projects during
school half-terms and over the Easter and summer
holidays.
The Winchester Project – known as the Winch – was set
up in the early 1970s in a disused public house. Today
the Winch remains in the same building, although it has
use of nearby sports facilities. The Winch has childcare
places for up to 60 children over the school holidays.
Its activities are structured and children have a choice
of different activities, which include arts, crafts, drama,
IT and sports, as well as time to relax. There are also
trips out to local sites and wider, to museums and
theme parks. The organisation offers after-school and
holiday childcare and receives a small grant from the
local authority to do this. The grant subsidises running
costs and enables the Winch to offer some reduced
price and free places on the after-school and holiday
schemes. There are designated places for children with
disabilities and special educational needs, which forms
part of their contract with the local authority.
Lewes YMCA is also a voluntary sector organisation
and is part of Sussex Central YMCA which has been
working with young people in the area since 1919. It
has a spacious site which includes a garden and gym.
Children have a choice of activities which include arts
and crafts, baking and sports. They also have time to
relax with their friends, in the garden, café or a secret
den. As with the Winch it has some free places that
are offered to vulnerable children that are funded by a
grant from the local authority.
A variety of provision
The holiday childcare sector is diverse, in relation to
its ownership, and in the quality and type of activities
offered. This year’s survey indicates that in England,
Scotland and Wales some 22 per cent of holiday
clubs were run by the maintained sector, mostly
local authorities and schools, with the remaining 78
per cent run by the PVI sector. There are, however,
large differences between local authorities in the
proportions of provision offered by the maintained
and PVI sectors. Both our survey and recent research
from the Department for Education (2014b) indicated
that there is less school-based provision per head of
population in deprived areas, compared with the least
deprived, with the latter showing 15 per cent of schools
offered holiday childcare in the most deprived areas,
compared with 20 per cent elsewhere.
Some maintained sector holiday childcare is subsidised.
This can take the form of a direct grant from the local
authority, school or another public body, an indirect
subsidy through free use of school premises and
equipment, or funding to offer free places to vulnerable
children who may be at risk of neglect when not at
school. This support is given in recognition that holiday
childcare serves two important purposes – as well as
providing childcare for working parents, it also offers
structured activities to vulnerable children who might
be at risk of being left alone over the school holidays.
10. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 10
Holiday childcare provision
While local authority and school budgets remain under
pressure, over the last year there has been a small
increase in the amount of maintained sector provision
in England. Compared with the same local authorities
in the previous year, there has been a 24 per cent
increase in the number of maintained sector providers
since 2013. This is welcome, although it should be noted
that a much smaller proportion of holiday childcare
is offered in the maintained sector. Additionally, in 35
per cent of local authorities in England and Wales, the
numbers of PVI providers has fallen, so existing gaps in
provision have not been closed.
There are some further problems associated with an
expansion of maintained sector provision. As we discuss
later, it can sometimes price out PVI provision. A further
difficulty for working parents is that much maintained
sector provision is not open for the whole working day.
Generally, local authority and school provision starts
later and closes earlier than that offered by the PVI
sector which may be open for nine or ten hours
every weekday.
Quality
Holiday clubs also differ in the quality of provision and
the type of activities that they offer. Yet, there has been
little consideration by policy makers in central and local
government about what quality means for holiday
childcare. This is an omission that needs to
be addressed.
The Family and Childcare Trust consider that the
quality of holiday as having two main components. The
first concerns the play and development opportunities
provided to children by the holiday childcare itself. The
second component concerns the ability of holiday
childcare to deliver wider aims, such as enabling
parents to work.
Good quality in this area means children having
a stimulating, rewarding, enjoyable and safe
time, promoting their mental, physical and social
development. A number of components contribute
to this aspect of quality, including trained staff and a
sufficient range of resources and spaces.
Access to outdoors spaces is important for children’s
physical development and for allowing a wider range
of activities to take place. Access to transport and
adequate staff numbers are crucial for being able
to provide trips to external locations. The physical
resources of a programme have a significant role in
determining the quality of play and interactions that
children are able to experience.
There are also significant human resource components
to quality holiday childcare. Attentive and well qualified
staff are crucial to encouraging children’s play and
development, providing support, preventing harm,
resolving disputes or issues that might arise, and
identifying any problems or issues that children might
have. Staff to child ratios are a particularly important
component of quality.
The second component of quality is the ability of
holiday childcare to deliver wider aims, including
enabling parents to work. The provision of pre-and
post-holiday scheme breakfast or dinner clubs (or
the capacity for early drop-offs and late pick-ups) is
particularly important in this respect. But a number
of issues can hinder the delivery of good quality
holiday childcare. In general, budgetary pressure is
the largest single challenge to delivering quality, as
quality provision may well be more expensive for
parents. Resources are needed for staff, materials and
equipment and to organise trips. In practice, this means
that a holiday club has to strike a difficult balance
between quality and affordability.
The nature of holiday childcare can make staffing it
challenging. Demand for this is subject to short term
fluctuations because of parents making plans at the
last minute, working part-time or having plans for their
children outside of the holiday club for some weeks
and not others. This creates a situation in which it
can be hard to predict the number of staff that will
be needed in advance and it can be a challenge to
change staffing arrangements at short notice – finding
good quality flexible staff can be very difficult for
some schemes. One response to this has been to have
holiday clubs working together to smooth out peaks
and troughs in demand and supply. This has been
achieved in the maintained sector, but the competition
in the private sector makes cooperation more difficult.
11. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 11
The cost of holiday childcare
As soon as the holidays came, I couldn’t pay the childminder, her fees
were extortionate for the whole day. So she [daughter] used to go to my
grandmother’s – rather than my mum because my mum was working full-
time. But since my grandmother died, there has been no-one to care for my
daughter. I just can’t afford the childminder or the club. So until she is older, I take
unpaid leave over the summer holidays. We can’t afford it and I would rather
work (Debbie, mother of one).
In Britain, maintained sector holiday childcare now
costs an average of £96.04 per week, compared with
£118.65 per week in the PVI sector (Table one). These
price differences are a result of subsidies and because
holiday clubs provided by local authorities and schools
often have access to free premises and equipment.
Taking into account different patterns of ownership,
the overall costs of one week of full-time (50 hours) of
holiday childcare is now £114.51. This is a weighted cost
which accounts for the greater proportion of holiday
childcare provided by the PVI sector.
Overall, holiday childcare is 1.7 per cent more
expensive than it was last year – again this is a
weighted figure that takes into account ownership
patterns. However, prices have fallen by 3.1 per cent
in the maintained sector and risen by 2.7 per cent in
the PVI sector. Table Two gives the regional changes in
prices since 2013.
Table Two: Increase in holiday childcare costs over a 12 month period 2013-2014, by region and nation
Region/nation Increase in costs in maintained
(school, local authority) sector
holiday club or play scheme
Increase in costs in private,
voluntary and independent sector
holiday club or play scheme
Increase in
weighted
costs
East of England -28.9% -10.3% -15.3%
East Midlands 18.3% 12.8% 9.2%
Greater London 1.6% 10.9% 8.8%
North East 26.2% -5.7% 0.3%
North West 5.8% -2.6% -3.4%
South East 3.3% 18.4% 15.8%
South West -8% 3.8% 4.1%
West Midlands 8.9% -15.2% -0.5%
Yorkshire and Humberside -1.6% 3.5% -0.7%
England (Regional Average) 0.7% 2.5% 2.08
Wales -27.2% 7.2% 2%
Scotland -13.9% 0.5% -0.2%
Britain average of regionals
and nations
-3.1% 2.7% 1.7%
Source: Family and Childcare Trust Holiday Childcare Survey, 2014
12. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 12
The cost of holiday childcare
Since 2009 the price of holiday childcare in the PVI
sector has risen by 21 per cent and increase of 17 per
cent in local authority and school provision. In 2009
parents were paying an average of £82.03 per week
for childcare in the maintained sector and £98.04 per
week for PVI provision.
The South East of England is the region with the most
expensive holiday childcare. The most expensive
holiday club cost club cost £530 per week and was
located in the East Midlands. Figure Two gives the
most expensive holiday childcare clubs in each region
and nation of Britain. There were 69 local authorities -
out 177 in the survey - where of the most expensive
holiday childcare projects exceeded the £175 limit
which is the maximum level for help through the
childcare element of Working Tax Credit. (This means a
parent gets 70 per cent of this or £122.50 per week).
Figure Three: Most expensive holiday childcare for full-time place per week, by region, 2014
£0
£100
£200
£300
£400
£500
£600
£263EastM
idlands£530
London£437
North
East£200
North
W
est£180
South
East£316
South
W
est£243W
estM
idlands£210
Yorks
and
Hum
berside£250
W
ales£180
Scotland£207
Eastern
Source: Family and Childcare Trust Holiday Childcare Survey, 2013
As already noted, holiday childcare is now more
expensive in the PVI sector compared with local
authority and school provision, although this was not
the case in the past and in a few areas PVI provision
is still cheaper than the maintained sector. These
variations are much larger than the intra-regional
differences in prices shown in Table One. Across Britain
in the ‘average’ local authority, there is a £111.22
difference in price between the most expensive holiday
club and the cheapest, meaning many parents face a
holiday childcare costs lottery.
13. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 13
The cost of holiday childcare
Table Four: Average regional and national price difference between cheapest and most expensive holiday in each local
authority, 2014
Region Average local authority price difference
Eastern £128.31
East Midlands £159.61
London £145.78
North East £96.21
North West £88.73
South East £125.16
South West £111.03
West Midlands £106.12
Yorkshire and Humberside £107.67
Scotland £61.96
Wales £92.81
Britain average of regions and nations £111.12
Source: Family and Childcare Trust Holiday Childcare Survey, 2014
Local differences in prices have a number of causes.
Some holiday childcare projects offer more trips and
activities than others, so are more expensive. Some
offer paid-for refreshments, while others do not. Some
providers are open for longer hours than others, so
they may have higher staff costs over the whole day.
Conversely, hourly pay levels in the PVI sector tend to
be lower than in the maintained sector, with wages
being 22 per cent higher in maintained sector holiday
than in the private sector in 2011. As noted above,
fewer PVI providers receive grants from local authorities
or the use of free premises and equipment. Those in
the private sector also aim to make a profit which
may also account for the higher price of provision in
this sector.
These price variations raise important questions at
a time when the costs of childcare are the subject
of political and policy debate. Should schools be
encouraged to offer more holiday childcare? What is
the impact of increasing subsidised provision on the
financial sustainability of the PVI sector? What action
can be taken by the UK and devolved governments to
level holiday childcare costs? How much profit should a
private provider be allowed to make? How do countries
outside the UK support and subsidise holiday childcare
provision?
Many people might argue for more holiday childcare
provision in the maintained sector, given the difference
in cost. There are many advantages of doing this and
the Family and Childcare Trust welcomes the renewed
focus on the role of schools in providing wrap-around
and holiday childcare. However, increasing subsidised
school-based holiday childcare risks undercutting local
PVI provision and worsening gaps in provision. The
record of the maintained sector in responding to the
childcare needs of working parents is not as good as the
PVI sector, as illustrated by more limited opening times in
the maintained sector. If school-based holiday childcare
is to be expanded, it must not be at the expense of
childcare flexibility and its availability to working parents.
Outside the UK a number of other developed countries
subsidise holiday childcare by giving money directly to
providers, which is often termed supply-side funding.
In turn, providers deliver free or low cost childcare,
with better off parents paying more for this service.
This contrasts with the UK where most public subsidies
for holiday childcare at directed at parents. There are
some benefits to supply-side funding as it can keep
prices down. The receipt of funding can also be linked
to minimum opening hours and to meeting quality
standards, thus benefitting children and parents. To
these ends the Family and Childcare Trust is asking
for the UK Government to set up an independent
review of childcare funding, which should consider
means of simplification and a move to shifting greater
proportions of state subsidy towards supply-side
funding where money is channelled to providers. We
are also calling for similar action in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland.
14. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 14
Gaps in holiday childcare supply
Childcare is scarce where I live and if I didn’t book early I would be stuck
(Ruth, mother of two).
The Childcare Act 2006 obliges all local authorities in
England and Wales to provide sufficient childcare for
working parents and those undertaking training or
education with the intention of returning to work.
Local authorities are also obliged to ‘have regard’ for
disabled children.
In order to meet this duty, local authorities need to
know about gaps in childcare provision, so they can
intervene in the market. The Childcare Act 2006 and
its statutory guidance thus require local authorities
to assess childcare sufficiency. In Wales, childcare
sufficiency assessments are undertaken every three
years, with an annual update between the three year
reporting period. In England, the legal obligation to
assess childcare supply and demand has recently
been amended, first in statutory guidance and then in
the Children and Families Act 2014. Local authorities
in England are now required to produce an annual
report and action plan to explain how they are ensuring
sufficient childcare in their area:
“Report annually to elected council
members on how they are meeting
their duty to secure sufficient
childcare, and make this report
available and accessible to parents”.
(Department for Education, 2012)
There is no equivalent legislation to the Childcare
Act 2006 in Scotland, although the 2008 Early Years’
Framework requires that local authorities have “a
strategic view of childcare accessibility” (Scottish
Government, 2008). While more local authorities in
Scotland are now looking at whether there is enough
childcare for the under-fives, only nine of the 26 local
authorities who replied to our survey had undertaken
an assessment of the supply of holiday childcare in
their area.
The survey asked local authorities to use their most
recent childcare sufficiency data to estimate if they
had sufficient childcare for different groups of children
and the results are given in Table Five.
15. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 15
Gaps in holiday childcare supply
Table Five: Percentage of local authorities with sufficient childcare across the whole local authority for specific groups
of children, 2014, with 2013 figures in brackets
Region/nation Percentage of
local authorities
reporting
sufficient
holiday
childcare for
4-7 year olds
Percentage of
local authorities
reporting
sufficient
holiday
childcare for
8-11 year olds
Percentage of
local authorities
reporting
sufficient holiday
childcare for
children aged 12
and above
Percentage of
local authorities
reporting
sufficient holiday
childcare for
disabled children
Percentage of
local authorities
reporting
sufficient holiday
childcare for
working parents
East of England 33% (27%) 22% (18%) 0% (9%) 0% (18%) 22% (27%)
East Midlands 22% (40%) 11% (20%) 11% (20%) 0% (0%) 22% (20%)
Greater London 33% (17%) 32% (26%) 9% (17%) 18% (13%) 23% (22%)
North East 45% (57%) 36% (42%) 18% (14%) 27% (28%) 45% 57%)
North West 58% (71%) 53% (57%) 32% (28%) 32% (50%) 58% (79%)
South East 24% (29%) 24% (29%) 6% (7%) 6% (14%) 18% (21%)
South West 38% (25%) 23% (25%) 0% (17%) 8% (0%) 15% (0%)
West Midlands 45% (30%) 18% (30%) 0% (20%) 18% (20%) 9% (30%)
Yorkshire and
Humberside
23% (21%) 15% (21%) 8% (14%) 15% (7%) 15% (14%)
England (average for
all local authorities)
37% (36%) 28% (30%) 11% (16%) 15% (18%) 27% (30%)
Wales 6% (16%) 6% (6%) 0% (0%) 6% (0%) 6% (16%)
Source: Family and Childcare Trust Holiday Childcare Survey, 2014
Only seven local authorities in England, three in
Scotland and one in Wales had enough childcare for
children who live in rural areas. It can be seen from
Table Five that over the last year the gaps in provision
have increased for many groups of children.
The obligation of local authorities to assess the
sufficiency of childcare was introduced in 2008 in
most parts of in England and Wales. It was in this year
that local authorities carried out their first childcare
sufficiency assessments, which were meant to identify
gaps in supply and contain action plans to ensure that
these gaps in provision were filled. We reviewed our
2009 holiday childcare survey to look at how much
progress had been made over a five year period in
filling gaps. Table Six shows that over this five year
period gaps in provision have increased substantially
rather than decreased.
Table Six: Local authorities with enough holiday childcare for particular social groups in 2009 and 2014
England 2009 England 2014 Wales 2009 Wales 2014
For 4-7 year olds 63% 37% 25% 5%
For 8- 11 year olds 54% 28% 31% 5%
For childcare aged 12 and over 20% 11% 6% 0%
For disabled children 20% 15% 19% 6%
For parents who work full-time 49% 27% 19% 6%
16. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 16
Gaps in holiday childcare supply
The Family and Childcare Trust is particularly
concerned that such little progress has been made
to meet the holiday childcare needs of older children,
a group who are frequently forgotten in debates
about ‘childcare’. Activities for them are sometimes
not viewed as ‘childcare’ and are not considered in
childcare sufficiency reports. It is significant to note that
24 local authorities in England and 3 in Wales did not
know if they had enough childcare for this group, as
their sufficiency analysis did not include children over
the age of 11.
Children of secondary school age may attend
sports or cultural activities in the school holidays, or
activities organised by local authority youth services
which include some open access play schemes. This
functions as de facto childcare. Much of this type of
provision has seen extensive funding cuts since 2010.
Analysis undertaken by the Family and Childcare Trust
indicated that local authority youth service budgets
had fallen by an average of 4.9 per cent between
financial years 2012-2013 and 2013-2014. This often
results in severe reductions to de facto childcare for
older children, and leaves more children unsupervised
over the school holidays. For this reason, the Family
and Childcare Trust is calling on the Department for
Education to work with the Department for Culture,
Media and Sport and the Home Office to ensure
that there is enough de facto childcare for older
children. We are calling for similar cross-departmental
collaboration to take place in Scotland and Wales.
We are finding it extremely difficult
to manage during the school
holidays as we are reliant on elderly
grandparents to help with childcare
and they find it increasingly difficult
physically to care for our son. We are
now at the point where I am faced
with having to give up work due to
lack of suitable childcare (Lisa, parent
and carer, 2014).
Disabled children
Tables Five and Six show that families with disabled
children are another group who find it difficult to find
childcare. In 2014, the Family and Childcare Trust
supported a Parliamentary Inquiry into childcare for
disabled children. There was consensus among Inquiry
respondents that older disabled children and young
people are worse served by existing provision (Contact a
Family, 2014). As non-disabled children access childcare
provision less once they are in secondary school, the
mainstream childcare market is relatively limited and
fewer options exist for disabled young people.
Providing childcare to this group also presents
additional challenges. Numbers of older children
are often low which challenges the sustainability
of settings. The physical size of older children can
increase requirements for manual handling training
and can make some providers reluctant to take on
children with challenging behaviour or developmental
impairments. It is also a greater challenge to provide
quality childcare that offers opportunities for disabled
children to do similar activities to their peers, so parents
are sometimes reluctant to use provision that does not
help their children thrive.
Respondents also identified childcare provision during
the school holidays and before and after the school
day as particular problems to families with disabled
children. Mainstream schools are increasingly open
for extended school days to provide breakfast clubs
and after school care but these settings are often not
inclusive, even to pupils attending the school during the
day. One to one care and other school based support
is typically not extended beyond school hours.
Far fewer special schools offer wraparound care, most
likely because the numbers of families accessing the
support would be low and it is harder to find additional
staff to cover extended hours. This means children who
attend these schools must travel to another childcare
setting or access home-based care. Many respondents
to the Inquiry identified a failure to take advantage
of special school facilities and resources as an issue
limiting childcare provision. Parents told the Inquiry
that outside of term time holiday schemes were often
offered sporadically during the holidays and so did not
offer continuity of care through the school holidays.
Holiday provision was often limited to times of the day
that did not cover parents’ work schedules. For children
in secondary school, provision was even more limited
as many settings only offer places to children up to the
age of 11. Some disabled older children were expected
to attend the same provision as much younger children
and take part in the same activities they did when
younger. For all holiday provision, availability was limited
and often had to be secured a long time in advance.
17. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 17
Gaps in holiday childcare supply
Many disabled young people experience services that
are not age appropriate or do not help them emulate
the opportunities their non-disabled peers enjoy.
Parents want provision for their children at this age to
help them thrive by developing their independence
and providing flexibility and variety. Yet much available
provision does not live up to this expectation.
Disabled young people told the Inquiry what they
want out of childcare and supervised activities is the
opportunity to do activities other teenagers may take
for granted. They wanted to enjoy spending time with
their friends, learn new skills, have fun and do things
independently. To meet these aspirations, disabled
young people often want options to do activities in
structured settings, with personal assistants in their own
home or in small buddy groups.
The trends shown in Tables Five and Six are
disappointing. Since the passage of the Childcare Act
2006 there has been little progress in England and
Wales to ensure that gaps in provision are filled. There
are a number of reasons that explain this failure to
close gaps in provision. All childcare is provided by
a mixed market of private, not-for-profit and public
sector providers and is bound by rules to determine
its quality. These requirements, rightly, set a fixed
minimum cost for providers. Most for-profit childcare
providers operate on low profit margins that are highly
sensitive to small changes in income or outgoings.
A local community might almost reach market
saturation for childcare, or there might be services that
meet mainstream needs, but investment in additional
childcare places for particular types of need – for
example, disabled children or in sparsely-populated rural
areas – is unlikely to be delivered in a free market. The
current economic climate and difficulties securing credit
may put off providers from setting up new schemes.
A further reason that childcare gaps persist is that
providers may lack information about potential local
markets for these services. If local authority childcare
sufficiency reports fail to examine for the need for
childcare outside normal office hours, then providers
will not know if there is a market for this provision.
Another emerging trend highlighted in our survey is the
growing number of local authorities whose childcare
sufficiency analysis is inadequate or not undertaken at
all. This is a particular problem in Scotland where there
is no specific obligation to assess childcare sufficiency,
but we have also identified 20 local authorities in
England which have failed to undertake and publish
childcare sufficiency analysis since 2011. These local
authorities did not know if they had enough childcare
or not, so cannot intervene to fill gaps in provision.
This is clearly unsatisfactory – these local authorities
are not fulfilling their legal obligations. The Family
and Childcare Trust believes that the Department for
Education – and devolved governments in Scotland
and Wales – needs to hold these local authorities to
account and support them to fill gaps in provision.
In England and Wales many childcare sufficiency
reports also lack detailed action plans that identify
how gaps in provision might be filled and this is a
further reason that that gaps in provision remain. At a
national and local level childcare for older children has
not attracted the attention that is given to childcare
for under-fives. It is easy for the needs of school-age
children to be overlooked and for local authorities not
to prioritise holiday childcare. Again, it is important that
local authorities are held to account for their failures to
ensure sufficient childcare.
But the process of intervention in the holiday childcare
market can be fraught with difficulties. In the past,
some local authorities responded to gaps in provision
by setting up their own holiday childcare schemes.
Such provision is often provided at a lower price than
that PVI provision, as running costs may be subsidised
or the holiday project may use free premises. In
some cases subsidised public sector holiday risks
undercutting PVI provision. Where local authorities
and schools do deliver their own provision they need
to ensure that they do not price other providers out of
the market. What is needed is leadership from central
government and a considered strategy that helps local
authorities fulfil their legal obligations.
18. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 18
The impact of the holiday childcare
lottery on families
Last year my husband left his job and took a year out specifically to look after
our children. This year we will only have one week together as a family in the
whole year as the rest of our holiday entitlement is needed to be spread over all
the days holiday (Jane, mother of two).
The results of our local authority survey showed the
high costs of holiday childcare and gaps in provision in
all parts of Britain. While some parents find high quality
and affordable childcare in a location that is convenient
for them, other parents face a lottery of variable costs
and acute shortages of childcare. This year, we wanted
to understand the impact that this had on families so
working with Netmums we undertook an online survey
of parents in May 2014. The respondents appear to
be a representative sample of the parental population
in respect both to their qualifications profile and that
nine per cent received help with their childcare costs
through tax credits. (Nationally, HMRC data suggests
that eight per cent of families receive help with their
childcare costs this way (HMRC (2014)).
Parents described a holiday childcare lottery of large
differences in prices and gaps in provision, with 35 per
cent of parents in our survey finding it difficult or very
difficult to find holiday childcare they could afford.
Some 28 per cent of parents reported difficulties
finding holiday childcare at a convenient location.
Families often found it hardest to cater for 12-14 year
olds, who still require supervision, but for whom holiday
clubs are not appropriate.
Not all parents have employers who are sympathetic
to parents’ caring obligations, with 28 per cent of
survey respondents reporting their employer had
refused a requests to change work arrangements over
the holidays. Some 22 per cent of parents reported
that their employer was unsympathetic or very
unsympathetic to requests to change working hours
over school or nursery periods. The least-well qualified
parents were three times more likely to report an
unsympathetic boss, suggesting that highly qualified
parents have greater negotiating power with their
employer. For this reason the Family and Childcare
Trust is asking the Government to take action to ensure
that all parents benefit from family friendly work
practices such as flexible working or term-time only
contracts.
Perhaps the most shocking finding of the survey
were the strategies that parents took to ensure they
could care for their children in the absence of holiday
childcare. Shift-parenting was common and some
parents described the negative impacts of this on
family relationships. A lack of holiday childcare had
forced many parents into courses of action that risked
damaging their career prospects and finances, with
25 per cent reporting they had been forced to cut their
hours of work during school holidays and 17 per cent
stating they had taken days off sick to cover holiday
childcare. An additional 12 per cent of parents had
given up a job because they could not find holiday
childcare (Figure Seven).
Figure Seven: Impact of lack of affordable holiday childcare on family life
I have had to reduce my hours of work over school or nursery holidays. 25.2%
I have had to arrange flexible working over the holidays. 26.6%
I have had to take unpaid leave. 30.9%
I have sometimes had to take days off sick in order to cover childcare. 17.1%
I have had to give up my job because I could not find suitable holiday childcare. 11.9%
I have had to ask friends or relative to look after my children. 44.4%
My partner and I have had to use up our leave on childcare and this means we have not been able to
take a joint holiday.
26.8%
I have gone into debt or taken a loan because I could not afford holiday childcare. 5.1%
We have sometimes left our younger children home alone without supervision. 0.6%
N=1,587
Source: Netmums survey for the Family and Childcare Trust, 2014
19. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 19
The impact of the holiday childcare lottery on families
This does not only affect families, but has a wider
impact on workplaces and the economy. Some 17 per
cent of parents admitted to taking sick leave in order to
cover childcare over the holidays. If this pattern applied
to all UK parents, one day missed to cover childcare
every year represents nearly 900,000 days of avoidable
absence every year and costs the UK economy nearly
£100 million every year2
.
In April 2014 an estimated 27.5 per cent of the UK’s
female working-age population was economically
inactive, many of them because of caring
responsibilities. Maternal employment rates in the
UK are lower than many other developed countries,
particularly for low skilled workers (Thompson and
Ben-Galim, 2014). Frequently mothers who have coped
with childcare arrangements when their children were
in nurseries find that school holiday childcare is an
unsurmountable barrier to work (ibid). This observation
was supported by our survey results with nearly 12 per
2 Based on average gross weekly earnings for 2013 of £517 per
week.
cent of parents saying that they had given up work
because they could not find holiday childcare (Table
Seven). Such a move is likely to have a major impact
on family finances as well as the broader economy.
The impact of parents leaving the labour market
because childcare is unaffordable or unavailable
represents a loss of tax revenue and skills, often set
alongside increased benefit payments. Thompson and
Ben-Galim (2014) calculate that even a one per cent
increase in maternal employment would result in a net
gain to the exchequer of £200 million per year. This is a
powerful argument for investing in holiday childcare.
20. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 20
Fixing holiday childcare
The results of our 2014 holiday childcare survey shows
increasing costs which are coupled with severe –
and increasing – shortages in some parts of Britain,
particularly for older children, disabled children,
children in Wales and those in rural areas. This has a
major impact on both family wellbeing and the wider
economy.
Across Britain all of the major political parties have
recognised the importance of high quality and
affordable childcare for families. In particular, new
proposals have focussed on making childcare more
affordable for working parents. By 2016 there will be
increases in the level of childcare support through
Universal Credit and the new voucher system. This is
welcome, but it is a short-term solution that does not
address many of the other childcare difficulties faced
by parents, in particular gaps in provision that have
worsened rather than improved since the Childcare
Act 2006. Parents’ needs for childcare do not end when
their children start school, but for too long the childcare
needs of this group have been forgotten or marginalised.
The Family and Childcare Trust believes that it is time
to rethink childcare for school-age children. We believe
that there are a number of areas for action.
► The Government should ensure that all parents
benefit from family friendly work by putting in place
an information campaign for parents on their rights
and entitlements at work.
► Where there is insufficient holiday childcare,
central government should help local authorities fill
these gaps and work with parents to hold them to
account if they fail to do so.
► In England, local authorities and the Education
Funding Agency should work with schools to make
sure their premises and facilities are used to provide
childcare and activities over holiday periods.
► In England, the Department for Education should
work with the Department for Culture, Media and
Sport and the Home Office to ensure sufficient de
facto childcare for older children.
► We call for similar action in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland.
► The Government should commit to a new childcare
strategy covering under-fives and children of school
age. As part of this, it should set up an independent
review of childcare funding that delivers the
affordable and accessible childcare that parents
and employers need.
For too long, the childcare of school-age children has
felt like a forgotten issue. The run up to the next election
is an opportunity to address this and commit to a long-
term strategy that delivers for parents, employers, the
economy and crucially, for children.
21. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 21
Bibliography
Ben-Galim (2014) No more baby steps: a strategy for
revolutionising childcare, London: Institute for Public
Policy Research
Contact a Family (2014) Parliamentary Inquiry into
childcare for disabled children, London: Contact a
Family
Department for Education (DfE) (2012) Statutory
Guidance for Local Authorities on the Delivery of Free
Early education for Three and Four Year Olds and
Securing Sufficient Childcare, London: DfE
ibid (2014a) Childcare and Early Years Survey of
Parents, London: DfE
ibid (2014b) Primary schools providing access to
out of school care, London: DfE
Department for Education and Employment (DfEE) and
Department for Social Security (DSS) (1998) Meeting
the Childcare Challenge; A strategy and consultation,
London: DfEE and DSS
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) Child and Working
Tax Credit Statistics Geographical Analysis April 2014,
London: HMRC
HM Treasury (2004) Choice for parents: the best start
for children: a ten year strategy for childcare, London:
the Stationery Office
HM Treasury (2013) Tax-Free Childcare: consultation
on design and implementation, London: HM Treasury
House of Commons Library (2014) Tax Relief for
Childcare, London: House of Commons
Rutter, J. (2013) Holiday Childcare Survey, London:
Family and Childcare Trust, 2013
Scottish Government (2008) Early Years Framework,
Edinburgh: Scottish Government
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Gap: reforming childcare to help mothers into work,
London: Institute for Public Policy Research
22. Family and Childcare Trust
Holiday Childcare Survey 2014 22
Acknowledgements
The Family and Childcare Trust would like to thank
all local authority staff who helped compile the data
for this survey. In particular we are grateful to Family
Information Services in local authorities for their
support in the research. We would also like to thank
Netmums staff who helped with the parents’ survey,
the Winchester Project, the Lewes YMCA and all the
families who took the time to share their views with
us. We are also grateful to Computershare Voucher
Services and Community Playthings who have funded
this research and its dissemination,
About the authors
Jill Rutter is Head of Research and Policy at the Family
and Childcare Trust. Previously Jill was a senior
research fellow in migration at the Institute for Public
Policy Research. Educated at Oxford University and
London University’s Institute of Education, Jill has also
lectured at London Metropolitan University, worked in
as a policy advisor at the Refugee Council and as a
secondary school teacher. Her publications include
Refugee Children in the UK (Open University Press,
2006), Informal Childcare; Choice or Chance (Family
and Childcare Trust, 2012) and Migrant Integration
and Social Cohesion in the UK (Policy Press, 2015,
forthcoming).
Duncan Lugton is Policy and Research Assistant at the
Family and Childcare Trust. He recently graduated
with an MA in Philosophy from Brandeis University
in America and has a BA in Philosophy, Politics and
Economics from Oxford University. Before working at
the Family and Childcare Trust, Duncan was Policy and
Campaigns Intern at Sue Ryder.
About the Family and
Childcare Trust
The Family and Childcare Trust works to make the UK
a family friendly society where all parents and children
have the resources they need to thrive. The charity
was forced in 2013 as a result of a merger between
Daycare Trust and the Family and Parenting Institute.
Collectively both organisations have almost 40 years’
experience of policy and campaigning on issues
affecting families. The Family and Childcare Trust
undertakes research and policy advocacy. It also works
with parents, businesses and government in order to
serve families better.
About Computershare
Voucher Services
Computershare Voucher Services (CVS) is the
UK’s largest dedicated childcare voucher provider,
responsible for the administration, management and
development of childcare vouchers, an employee
benefit available to all eligible working parents. CVS
currently works with over 100,000 working parents,
more than 14,000 organisations and over 87,000 carers
each month.
CVS has vast experience of the childcare vouchers
industry, reinforced by significant technology
enhancements which benefit its diverse customer
base, spanning every sector, from some of the UK’s
largest corporations to SMEs.
CVS is a founding member of the Childcare Voucher
Providers Association (CVPA) which represents childcare
voucher providers and sets the benchmark for standards
in the industry through its Code of Practice, to ensure
carers, parents and employers receive the highest
standard of service from childcare voucher providers.
For more information visit:
www.computersharevoucherservices.com
About Community Playthings
A sound understanding of child development underpins
Community Playthings’ product design. Manufactured
in the UK, furniture and equipment supports children’s
creativity, learning and play in schools and nurseries
across the private, voluntary and public sectors.
In collaboration with leading educators and early years
consultants, Community Playthings also publishes
authoritative staff training resources. The most recent
releases are The irresistible classroom and A good
place to be Two.
Community Playthings has been creating child-friendly
environments for over 50 years. For more information,
visit: www.communityplaythings.co.uk