Data obtained by the EY Alliance via Freedom of Information (FOI) requests shows that the funding rates paid to local authorities for the so-called โfree childcareโ offer are just two-thirds of what the government itself estimated would be needed to fully fund the scheme. Following a two-year FOI battle with the Department for Education, the data reveals that civil servants estimated that a government-funded early years place for three- and four-year-olds would cost an average of ยฃ7.49 per hour by 2020/21. By contrast, the average rate paid to local authorities for this offer is currently just ยฃ4.89, according to independent analysts Ceeda. Thatโs a shortfall of ยฃ2.60 per child, per hour for every 30-hours place โ or ยฃ2,964 a over the course of a year.
The documents stateย that the government expects providers to โmove, over time, to full use of statutory staff ratiosโ to accomodate the shortfall.ย This is despite low child-adult ratios being associated with higher quality early years provision.
Rising costs for parents
The documents obtained also reveal that ministers were aware that the inadequate levels of investment proposed would result in higher prices for parents of younger children as providers would be forced to cross-subsidise those on the 30-hours scheme. The Early Years Spending Review Scenarios document, obtained by the Alliance, also exposes a deliberate strategy of passing-on costs to parents. It states: โWe will strip out funding for consumables (food, nappies) โ and set an expectation that providers charge parents for these.โ
This acceptance of inevitable price increases for families comes despite the fact that the document goes on to state that โa 10% reduction in the cost of childcare might lead to a 1.4% increase in the employment rate for married mothers with pre-school age childrenโ.
Accepting cost increases
A separate briefing note to then-early years minister Sam Gyimah, obtained as part of the FOI request and marked as โRE: Early Years Funding Rate Negotiationsโ, which has been heavily redacted, states that the total annual cost for increasing early years funding rates could be:
โโฆ reduced toย ยฃ500m if ministers are content that we do not fund providers to cross-subside the privately-paid rate for children younger than three, and instead accept that prices will rise for these childrenโ.
Following the 2015 Spending Review, government ultimately implemented an annual increase in funding of just ยฃ300m per year, which came into effect in 2017.
Long wait for transparency
The FOI request โ which asked for proof that the early years funding rates announced in 2015 and implemented in 2017 had been calculated to cover rising costs โ was originally filed back in December 2018. The DfE rejected this request, even after a ruling by the Information Commissionerโs Office, appealing to the First Tier Tribunal against the ICOโs decision. While the Allianceย awaitedย a Tribunal hearing date, the DfE claimed that it would be publishing the requested information as part of wider transparency documents, before eventually withdrawing its appeal and finally providing the documents to the Alliance.
Ongoing battle
The Alliance filed another FOI request in April 2021 asking for proof that the 1.2% increase in early years funding for 2021/22 would cover the cost of increased national living and minimum wages and the extension of the national living wage to 23- and 24-year-olds, as ministers have repeatedly claimed.
This request has once again been rejected by the DfE.
The DfE says that it is planning to release this information itself and that it is in the public interest to wait for it to do so. This is despite children and families minister Vicky Ford stating in January 2021, during a meeting of the APPG for Early Education and Childcare, that the government would be releasing this information.
Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, commented:
For years, the early years sector has warned that the so-called โfree entitlementโ offer is anything but free, in the face of repeated government claims that the policy is adequately funded. These documents, which they spent more than two years trying to hide, prove otherwise. The early years of a childโs life are critical to their long-term learning and development โ and yet ministers have been all too happy to force providers to work to maximum ratios, inevitably reducing quality, in order to save the Treasury some money. For so long, the government has tried to deflect the blame for rising childcare costs. But these documents prove, in black and white, that it knew that the introduction of the 30-hours policy, along with an insufficient level of investment, would result in higher costs for parents of younger children. Early years providers and parents have had enough of being forced to pay the price for this underfunded policy year after year. There is still time for the government to do the right thing, but at this point, the only way for it to maintain any credibility with parents and early educators is by agreeing to a full review of early years policy in this country. That means delivering the substantial investment the sector needs in the upcoming Spending Review. Only with fair and adequate funding will we ensure nurseries, pre-schools and childminders can continue delivering the quality, affordable care and education that children and families both need and deserve.
Source EY Alliance