When we said...what we meant was...
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/jun/13/labour-rules-out-universal-childcare-for-young-children-in-fiscal-credibility-drive
I was really pleased to see this as it suggests that Labour may actually want to have a proper adult conversation about the best way to provide and fund child care.
What we have had up to now is naive electioneering - effectively government and opposition trying to 'bribe' parents with the promise of more 'free stuff' without consideration of who will actually pay for it, and critically without proper consideration of how much is costs childcare providers to provide a place. So we've had a two-way conversation - government/opposition with parents, rather than a three way conversation between government/opposition, parents and childcare providers.
So I think many of you know, in another part of my life I an co-owner and Director of a Nursery, so I am exceptionally well acquainted with the challenges facing childcare providers.
The current model (in England) provides all parents with 15 hrs free childcare for 38 weeks a year from age 3. Some parents get more hours or can get free provision from age 2, but this is means tested. However the big issue is that nurseries are given funding to provide that free provision that doesn't actually meet the costs of providing the childcare.
So nurseries, most of which are private organisations, lose money on those 'free' hours. They can cope because most parents will require childcare beyond the 15hrs, 38 weeks a year and this is charged at a level that balances the loss for those 15 hrs. But if a government or opposition promises more 'free stuff' then nurseries have more hours when they are losing money and less opportunity to recoup that through the further hours. Many nurseries are teetering on the edge of viability already and additional 'free' stuff is likely to put them under. So under the current model unless government is actually prepared to fund the free hours at the cost that it takes to deliver them (and certainly the government figures simply don't stack up) then parents, who think they will be benefiting from more 'free stuff' will actually find it impossible to find childcare provision as it is no longer financially viable to run a nursery.
The current model only works (and only just works) if the number of free hours are limited and therefore most parents are also paying for additional hours.