9:50am Friday 25th July 2008
MORE than one in four parents on low incomes have been unable to get or keep a job because they can’t afford to pay for childcare, a poll for Save the Children has revealed.
In a survey by YouGov, 28 per cent of parents who have children under 18 and a net income of under £15,000 said they have been unable to get a job or continue with an existing job because the cost of childcare was too great.
The figure for parents with an income of over £15,000 was just nine per cent. The findings came as research by the Daycare Trust revealed the cost of childcare in Britain has risen by eight per cent in the last year and now costs an average of £87.43 per week.
Jason Strelitz, UK poverty spokesman for Save the Children, said: “Many parents on low incomes simply can’t afford to go to work.
“The costs of childcare are so high that by going to work they lose more money than they make.
“Many parents have to leave their jobs to look after their children. The majority of parents in poverty want to work but with no-one to look after their children they can’t.”
Dr Strelitz added: “We want the Government to increase the take-home pay of parents, by raising the working tax credit or by increasing the minimum wage.”
The research highlights the huge financial burden on parents during the summer holidays, when their children are not being looked after at school.
The Save the Children survey showed that 62 per cent of people agreed that the summer holidays are one of the most expensive times of year for parents.
Dr Strelitz said: “Save the Children wants the Government to introduce seasonal grants for the poorest families, of £100 per child in summer and winter, to help parents cope with these expensive times of year.
“This should be part of the £3 billion investment needed for the Government to keep its promise of halving child poverty by 2010.”