The Morrison Government will invest an additional $1.7 billion investment in child care as part of the 2021-22 Budget, boosting support for Mornington Peninsula families and beyond.
The changes, which will support low and middle income earners, will cut the cost of child care and improve the capability of working parents to take on an additional day or two of work.
Federal Member for Flinders, the Hon Greg Hunt MP said the changes are going to give greater choice to Peninsula parents who want to work an extra day or two a week.
“These changes will be putting more money back in families’ pockets and strengthening the ability for parents to return to work or take on additional hours.” Minister Hunt said.
“This is a targeted investment that makes child care on the Peninsula and across Australia more affordable, boosts our economy and increases workforce participation, especially Women’s workplace participation, which is at a high of almost 62 per cent.”
These changes mean improvements for all types of families on the Peninsula. This includes:
- A single parent on the Mornington Peninsula on $65,500 with two children in four days of long day care, who chooses to work a fifth day will be $71 a week better off.
- A family in the Mornington Peninsula earning $110,000 a year will have the subsidy for their second child increase from 72 to 95 per cent, and would be $95 per week better off for four days of care.
- A family with three children on $80,000 would have the subsidy increase from 82 to 95 per cent for their second and third child and be $108 per week better off for four days of care.
Under the current arrangements the maximum child care subsidy a family can receive is 85 per cent and the level is tapered so that those families that earn the least receive the most.
These subsidies apply at the same rate per child, no matter how many children a family may have in child care. As a result, for families with more than one child in care this means that their child care costs double when they have a second child.
Additionally, families with combined incomes above $189,390 face a child care subsidy cap of $10,560 per child per year.
As a result, these families start paying full fees towards the end of the year which reduces their incentive to participate in the workforce.
As part of the 2021-22 Budget, and starting on 1 July 2022 the Government will:
- Increase the child care subsidies available to families with more than one child aged five and under in child care (around 840 families in the Mornington Peninsula are in this position).
- Remove the $10,560 cap on the Child Care Subsidy, benefitting around 18,000 families
For those families with more than one child in child care, the level of subsidy received will increase by 30 percent to a maximum subsidy of 95 per cent of fees paid for their second and subsequent children.
Half of Australian families will now receive a 95 per cent subsidy for their second and subsequent children.
Minister for Education and Youth Alan Tudge said the measures would further ease the cost of child care and encourage workforce participation, particularly for larger families.
“Our child care system provides the most support to those who need it most,” Minister Tudge said.
“These measures will help remove the barriers for parents, particularly mothers, to return to the workforce or to increase their hours, as their family grows.”
The measures build on the Morrison Government’s 2018 Child Care Package which has kept out-of-pocket child care costs low for Australian families.
Minister for Women Minister Payne said it would mean there is greater choice for Australian women and men as they balance their family and work responsibilities.
“For women in particular, it opens the door for those choosing to work or to work more, which is critical to their own economic security and a prosperous Australian economy,” Minister Payne said.
“Increasing the Child Care Subsidy is an important measure that will help reduce the disincentives for women to participate in the workforce to the full extent they choose.”
Minister for Women’s Economic Security Jane Hume said these measures will see more women back in the workforce sooner, helping to further close the pay and participation gaps.
“The measures announced today are specific and targeted; designed to help women who have had a second child return to the workforce so they can continue to progress their own careers and contribute to Australia’s economy,” Minister Hume said.