September & October 2023
Childcare feels like the hottest topic in Australia at the moment. Whether it’s in relation to long wait lists in every town and city, inability for parents to return to work as a result or industry and workplaces up in arms about the lack of staff. There is also an equally if not more important reason childcare is needed in all regions and communities, Child Development.
Childcare isn’t just ‘babysitting’. Childcare is staffed by qualified educators who are nurturing children at the most important stage of life. A time when the brain grows to 90% of its adult size. Childcare is a keystone of the Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) system along with kindergarten. For some children ECEC is complementing their growth as a part of a family or single parent household, for some it can be where developmental delays are observed that may have gone unnoticed in a busy household and for some children this is the only place where they feel safe, learn valuable social skills and get to experience the joy of being a child.
The challenge with ECEC is that it is framed in a conversation around economic viability, not equity. ECEC is a universal service that makes a community attractive for families, supports a teacher to return to the local primary school, a great agronomist to continue their career whilst balancing parenthood, provides well-needed respite for a mother struggling with personal challenges, and supports children to thrive – a triple dividend investment.
As well-known Australian of the Year, Professor Fiona Stanley stated in her recent submission to the Commonwealth Productivity Commission Inquiry into Early Childhood Education and Care,