Close X
Thursday, October 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2022 03:31 PM
  • PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget officer says the federal government has not set aside enough money to build a national child-care system aimed at expanding spaces and cutting fees.

The Liberals' budget last year set aside $29.8 billion in new spending starting this fiscal year through to 2026 for the Canada-wide system by sending money to provinces and territories to cover costs.

The lower levels of government are expected to receive $27.2 billion in federal funding over that time, with another $2.5 billion set aside for Indigenous child care. 

Budget officer Yves Giroux's look at the child-care plan estimates that the $27 billion for provincial and territorial transfers isn't enough to meet expected demand.

While funding would subsidize nearly 500,000 spaces by 2026, Giroux says the funding gap means there will be nearly 182,000 fewer spots than needed to meet demand for the $10-a-day spaces.

The budget office expects demand for the spaces in licensed daycares to mirror what was seen in Quebec in the years after that province launched a provincially subsidized system.

Demand would be driven by more stay-at-home parents of young children jumping into the workforce, and incentivizing other parents to leave unlicensed care for subsidized spots.

Some demand could be met if unlicensed providers decide to make the switch to join provincial licensing rules, but Giroux said that would increase the overall cost of child care for governments.

In all, he expects the shortfall in federal funding to only amount to about $1 billion, but warns the gap will grow if it isn't addressed quickly.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Thursday took part in an announcement with Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson about how funds were affecting spaces and prices paid by parents in that province.

Trudeau said that the pandemic's effect on women in the labour force, when mothers left work to take care of young children as schools and daycares closed, helped drive the government's decision to invest more in child care than previously planned.

"It was really the impetus that allowed us to put forward a historic investment in the last budget, and to work so directly with so many provinces," Trudeau said.

The only province left to sign on to the child-care system is Ontario, which is in line to receive the biggest share of the funding pie.

The PBO estimated that the federal daycare funding would push share of the workforce looking for, or in a job up by 0.3 percentage points, boosting the country's output by 0.4 percentage points.

That growth would help pad federal coffers from new revenues with more people paying income taxes that Giroux estimates will total $1.5 billion over five years.

Federal spending on the income-tested Canada Child Benefit would also likely drop as family earnings rise by about $302 million over the same stretch, Giroux said.

MORE National ARTICLES

COVID-19 passport good first step: B.C. doctors

COVID-19 passport good first step: B.C. doctors
Dr. Matthew Chow with the Doctors of B.C. says his group would also like to see mandated vaccines for all health-care workers, similar to what is being done with long-term care staff.

COVID-19 passport good first step: B.C. doctors

814 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

814 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are 5,550 active cases of COVID-19 in the province and 163,793 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 261 individuals are in hospital and 129 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

814 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Leaders face two pivotal debates, French tonight

Leaders face two pivotal debates, French tonight
With less than two weeks to go, millions of voters are expected to tune in for Wednesday's two-hour French debate and Thursday's English debate. The topics for that debate are affordability, climate, COVID-19 recovery, leadership and accountability and reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples.

Leaders face two pivotal debates, French tonight

Vancouver Police help rescue paddleboarders stranded in First Narrows

Vancouver Police help rescue paddleboarders stranded in First Narrows
The Coast Guard and Royal Canadian Marine Search and Rescue also came to help. Working together, the four agencies rescued the 17 stranded paddleboarders and ferried them back to shore. 13 others managed to make it across the narrows to the North Shore.

Vancouver Police help rescue paddleboarders stranded in First Narrows

2425 COVID19 cases over 4 days

2425 COVID19 cases over 4 days
85.1% (3,943,729) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 77.6% (3,594,929) received their second dose.

2425 COVID19 cases over 4 days

B.C. residents can now get vaccine card

B.C. residents can now get vaccine card
Dr. Bonnie Henry says residents will need to provide their personal health numbers, dates of birth and vaccination dates for their first and second doses to securely download their vaccine cards.

B.C. residents can now get vaccine card