Friday, 19 April 2024
    04
    May
    040521

    Budget to slash childcare costs

    Caps on childcare subsidies for higher-income earners would be removed and costs slashed for families with two or more children under a new, $1.7 billion Budget proposal from the federal government, ABC News reports.

    The policy appears aimed at softening Labor’s attacks on the government over child care, but the Opposition is labelling the policy a “missed opportunity” for reform.

    The aim is to reduce disincentives for parents to work more hours in a week.

    Childcare subsidies are currently capped at $10,560, beyond which households with an income of more than $189,390 pay the full rate in childcare fees.

    The new policy, to be included in next week’s Budget, will remove that cap.

    Subsidies for families with two or more children will increase significantly, to a maximum 95 per cent.

    The government suggests that change will benefit a quarter of a million families, by an average of $2,260 per year.

    The changes are targeted at families with multiple children, based on an assessment that those families tend to bear proportionally higher childcare costs.

    Treasury suggests the changes will boost GDP by up to $1.5 billion, through making it easier for parents to work more hours.

    The Opposition detailed a more generous childcare policy late last year.

    That policy would similarly scrap the childcare subsidy cap, but would go further in boosting subsidy rates for families earning up to $530,000.

    FULL STORY

    Government reveals $1.7b Budget pledge to slash childcare costs, Labor hits out at ‘missed opportunity’ (ABC News)

    PHOTO

    Josh Freudenberg / ABC News