Delivering a childcare guarantee
Article
Access to high quality early years education and care is associated with better academic results at key stage 1, while children from the 40 per cent lowest income families who access formal childcare report better outcomes at key stage 1 than their peers who miss out.
The current failings of our childcare system is also costing parents, and particularly mothers, as many lone parents and second earners in couples are left worse off for taking on more paid work. A lack of available and affordable childcare also affects families’ wider wellbeing.
As gaps in school readiness widen between disadvantaged children and their peers, and as soaring living costs pull more families into financial insecurity, or deeper poverty, action on childcare is urgent.
This paper is the second of two exploring the case for a childcare guarantee in England. This paper argues that delivering a childcare guarantee would rely on three core shifts – towards a sustainable funding settlement, a new deal for the early years workforce, and to drive up quality and ensure a sufficient supply of childcare places in every neighbourhood.
Related items

A ‘paradigm shift’ in asylum and immigration policy?
In 2019, a package of asylum reforms known as the ‘paradigm shift’ was passed by a broad party consensus in the Danish parliament.
A return north: reflections on IPPR Scotland’s tenth anniversary conference
There’s nothing like moving away from Scotland to remind you just how Scottish you are.
The evolution of devolution: How the English devolution and community empowerment bill can go further
The government’s early commitment to broadening and deepening devolution in England is very welcome, but the bill must be bold enough to make change that people can see and feel.