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Commission 1.2 - Innovative financing strategies for ECCE Childcare Markets Helen Penn World Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education 27-29 September 2010 Moscow, Russian Federation Childcare Markets – do they work? Helen Penn International Centre for the Study of the Mixed Economy of Childcare (ICMEC) Cass School of Education University of East London, UK Childcare Markets • Most ECCE provision in the USA, in Africa and for the youngest children in many countries, is provided by entrepreneurs, as a small for profit business. • Often these small enterprises are not listed and not formally recorded, and the quality of the care and education they offer is very variable. They tend to be ignored in policy making. Quality and the childcare market? • The quality of the provision matters greatly in early childhood. McCartney comments that “the importance of child care quality is one of the most robust findings in developmental psychology.” • Good quality care enhances development; and may produce significant long-term effects • Poor quality care, with untrained staff and high staff turnover leads to poor outcomes in language, sociability and cognitive abilities for children. The longer children spend in it the worse it is for their future outcomes. Price variation in the supply of childcare • Good quality provision is expensive: the longitudinal studies cited as evidence of good outcomes for children cost from $22,000 - $7,600 per child per year • the quality of what small entrepreneurs offer is closely related to price. The more parents can pay, the better the quality of the provision. The very poorest parents who live in the poorest areas and who can pay least get the worst service. • Relying on entrepreneurs as the main form of ECCE provision exacerbates inequality. At the top end the provision matches the best that is available; at the bottom end it may be repressive or stunting. The children of the rich do well in good quality care, but the children of the poor loose still more ground in poor quality care. Demand for Childcare The demand for childcare is from working mothers in the informal or low-paid sector. In the USA and in the UK, as in low-income countries, most of this poor quality entrepreneurial provision is to be found in the poorest areas, in the downmarket areas, slums, barrios or shanty towns of large towns and cities. Poor women, many of them migrants cut off from their family support networks, struggle to survive in jobs that require long hours, as domestic servants, market traders and other informal low paid employment Childcare Markets Many USA economists (Becker, Blau) argue that a free market is the gold standard and that ECCE markets are like all other markets. They can solve problems about the supply of childcare – entrepreneurs will set up childcare to fill gaps in supply. They can solve problems about the supply of childcare – entrepreneurs will set up childcare to match the demand from parents for places. Parental choice is a paramount consideration. Parents must be free to choose and intervention is largely unnecessary Intervention in Childcare Markets Economists also accept that there are acceptable grounds for intervening in markets: • If the market is clearly failing and/or if • It is necessary to achieve equity objectives, ie if the level of inequality is unacceptable on moral grounds or if the level of inequality represents a waste of resources. Intervention in Childcare Markets • Many OECD and EU governments intervene in ECCE on these grounds – • Levels of inequality amongst citizens, especially children, are morally unacceptable, and social cohesion and social integration are desirable equity goals. All children deserve similar entitlements. • If mothers cannot access the labour market easily because there is an absence of childcare, this is inefficient and a waste of resources ie of women’s education and labour (EU Barcelona Agreement) Intervention in Childcare Markets • So some government intervention is almost always necessary if quality, equity and gender equality are important overarching goals. Four kinds of intervention: • Regulation • Subsidies • Price Controls • Direct provision/privatization Regulation? • Regulation is a way of controlling standards in a market. Elaborating a working system of standards is highly problematic even in rich countries and in low income countries it is a minefield. Small entrepreneurs in lowincome countries are unlikely to be able to afford to upgrade in any way to meet basic regulatory requirements, without considerable financial support. • In addition any system of regulation requires adequate monitoring and a system of sanctions for those who neglect the regulatory standards. In short, it requires some kind of legal framework and a bureaucracy. Subsidies • Subsidies are an acknowledgement that low income parents cannot afford to pay for childcare; the state must also offer some financial support. • Usually these direct or supply led subsidies are given with two stipulations: first that the enterprise must be non-profit; and secondly that regulatory requirements must be met. In low income countries, so many small childcare enterprises fall below regulatory standards that they cannot reliably be used for subsidized programmes. Price Controls? Price Controls are also used by many European countries to limit what parents pay for childcare. Generally the nursery may not charge more than 15% of household income. This limits the profits that entrepreneurs can extract. However this would be unworkable in any country without regulatory controls, and/or where income is not formally declared for tax purposes Direct Provision and Privatization? • A number of countries, including the ex-Soviet block and European countries considered that ECCE provision should be partly or wholly funded and delivered by the state. • In many of these countries that is still the case, particularly for children over age three. • Other countries, particularly post-transition countries, have decided that state provision is no longer sustainable, and services should be privatized or sold off, so that entrepreneurs can bear some of the costs. • But privatization has not worked fairly. Firstly the regulatory systems have not been in place, and secondly poor families have borne a disproportionate amount of the costs. Conclusion • In the absence of government funded provision entrepreneurial childcare is an ignored but important aspect of ECCE services. • Although it may close some gaps in supply and demand, entrepreneurial provision tends to be deeply inequitable, volatile, and very variable in quality. • More research and information about the reach and scope of entrepreneurial childcare is necessary • But there are considerable doubts that a childcare market relying on entrepreneurs can offer any kind of solution to problems of quality and equity in early childhood. Contacts • Further information can be obtained from the website of our research centre, The International Centre for the Study of the Mixed Economy of Childcare (ICMEC) .: • http://www.uel.ac.uk/icmec • Next year ICMEC is bringing out an edited book Childcare Markets: Local and Global. • For those who wish to pursue references or engage in further debate on this issue, please contact me on • [email protected]