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The Time is Now: A Comprehensive Family and Human Capital Policy
Framework to Achieve 15 by 15
Dr. Paul KershawUniversity of British Columbia
Human Early Learning Partnership
Prepared for the 2009 ECEBC Assessment Workshop“Time is of the Essence: Perspective from Parents and Professionals”
May 21, 2009. Vancouver BC
What is the Problem? Why do we tolerate so much early vulnerability?
Not a technical problem.
Not a problem of insufficient research evidence.
Not a problem of $.
G7 Debt over GDP 1970-2005
Source: Department of Finance Economic and Fiscal Reference Tables, #57
National tax-GDP ratio = 3 percentage points below OECD average.
We’re not behind internationally in terms of health care spending; education or benefits for seniors.
Beware confusing ‘affordability’ with priorities.
The Problem is…Canadian Culture
1. We convince ourselves we can’t afford it.
2. We opt to treat illness, rather than promote health
3. We ignore gender inequality, and its relationship to family policy
4. As a generation, the collective action of Canadian babyboomer implies they are content to compromise the future for those who follow.
Optimal Investment Levels
Preschool School Post School
Age0
Mismatch: Social Investment vs. Health Promotion Opportunity
Cumulative Public Investment
Source: Carneiro & Heckman, Human Social Policy (2003)
What is MAGICAL
about Age 6?
Sweden’s Public Expenditure for Children 0-17
Source: S. Bremberg (2006), National Institute of Public Health, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden
Medical Care Crowds Out Health Promotion
In response to growing health care expenditures as % of total expenditures in 2007, the BC gov’t announced 15% provincial cut to child care services.
80% of expenditures in last months of life
We must become sophisticated critics of medical care, in order to bridge health promotion with non-medical care...
Key questions:
1.What medical care do we owe one another as our capacity to save increases dramatically with costly technology and drugs?
2. Do we really want roughly 80% of our health expenditures to occur in the final year of life?
3.And what does it mean for a society when it spends hundreads of thousands, if not millions, of dollars to save a pre-term baby – one life – but is remarkably hesitant to invest in health promotion for the population through programs like early learning and care, housing, food?
Content to Burn-Out Women, and leave unquestioned the place of patriarchy in family policy…A very early universal program = family allowance. Why was it implemented as WWII ended?
Male breadwinner ‘family wage’ model of social policy.
The child care services paid by for by federal government during the war years were eliminated.
Continue primarily with cash approach to this day. Major innovations = maternity and parental leave; CCTB/NCBS.
Feminism, gender equality and declining male wages the majority of women with young children are in the labour market; and the majority of these work full-time. But we haven’t compensated by using policy to demand that men assume additional responsibility for caregiving; or that communities provide more support.
2008 Gender Gap & Family Policy RankingsGender
GapFamily Policy
Country Ranking Score/10
Norway 1 8Finland 2 8Sweden 3 10New Zealand 5 6Denmark 7 8Ireland 8 1Netherlands 9 5Germany 11 4UK 13 5Switzerland 14 3France 15 8Australia 24 2US 27 3Canada 31 1
Sources: World Economic Forum and UNICEF
Collectively, Baby-Boomer Decisions = a Social Problem
Baby-boomers = dominant political generation, especially in office:
Tolerate nearly 30% of children becoming vulnerable before school.Tolerate Canada being a fossil fuel dinosaur, compromising environmental sustainability. Inherited next to no public debt. But content to leave other generations with public federal debt that = over 30% of GDP.Not the generation that made great sacrifices during Depression and World Wars…
Ignoring intergenerational justice?
5 Policy Recommendations for 15 by 15
Family Time and Resources:1. Parental leave
2. Income Supports and work/life balance
Community Supports:
3. ECD coalitions, community planning
4. Pregnancy, parenting and early intervention
5. Early childhood education and care
NO MORE POLARIZING DEBATES ABOUT PROVIDING SERVICES OR SUPPORTING PARENTS (MOTHERS) TO CARE PERSONALLY!
Extrapolation of BC's Policy Framework for Optimal Early Child Development to Pan-Canadian Analysis
Additional Social Infrastructure InvestmentAll $ millions unless otherwise noted Time and Resources Community Supports
49% of Investment 51% of Investment
Jurisdiction Per capita %Parental Leave
Income Supports
ECD Coalitions, Pregnancy, Parenting,
Screening & Intervention
Early Childhood
Education & Care (ECEC)
Total Additional Investment
Total as % of GDP
Nfld/Lab 1.52% 68 95 11 256 430 1.37%
PEI 0.42% 19 26 3 38 86 1.82%
NS 2.82% 127 176 20 251 575 1.68%
NB 2.24% 101 140 16 189 446 1.63%
Quebec 23.28% 1,048 1,453 168 1,312 3,981 1.32%
Ontario 38.82% 1,747 2,423 281 4,146 8,596 1.46%
Manitoba 3.62% 163 226 26 347 762 1.50%
Sask 3.06% 138 191 22 576 927 1.44%
Alberta 10.76% 484 671 78 1,766 2,999 1.03%
BC 13.14% 591 820 95 1,576 3,082 1.55%
Yukon/NWT/Nun 0.34% 15 21 2 20 59 0.66%Total Pan-Canadian 100% $4,501 $6,242 $723 $10,476 $21,942 1.37%
? ? *
$22 Billion/Year?!?= Price for Reducing vulnerability from roughly 30% to 15%, and eventually 10%
Former PM Martin commitment of $5 billion over 5 years = modest.
About 12-20% of total fed/prov health care spending: ($170 billion, Sen W. Keon)Federal Old Age Security = $32 billion (2007/08)RRSPs = $16.6 billion (2009)
Human Capital BenefitsBC data project what a reduction in vulnerability from 29% to 15%, and then to 10% will mean for later school success.
.5 standard deviation improvement in language and cognitive test scores.63 percentage point increase to GDP
= $264-$274 billion plus to Canada per year
But patience is a requisite virtue, because the children have to get through school; become the majority in the labour market
In meantime, partial returns from labour supply; work-life balance savings to health expenditures; poverty reduction savings to health expenditures; crime reduction savings
Stimulus Now!Parents with young children lifecourse stage where they spend more than save.
ECEC Capital and construction investments to remodel schools and build appropriate facilities.
Family Policy should be integral to stimulus package.
15 by 15 =
Smart Economics
A Just Cause: minimizes inequality among children; across sexes
Now Canadians just need to make this objective a priority.
If we don’t, being ‘Canadian’ may be compromising our health because we fail to invest in its determinants.
Thank you.
• Paul Kershaw, Ph.D.• The University of British Columbia• College of Interdisciplinary Studies• Human Early Learning Partnership (HELP)• http://www.earlylearning.ubc.ca/PaulKershaw.htm• e-mail: [email protected]
International Research Literature Shows thatFamilies with Children Have Three Overarching Needs
Time
Resources
Support Services
Recommendation 1:
Build on parental leave to: increase duration to 18 months improve coverage improve benefit levels, 80% of $62,000 reserve time for fathers.
Mid-Ranking because:
50 weeks of leave = better than average. But…
× Some not eligible× Benefit Levels = 55% of max
$42,300 about half of average income
× Some lower/middle income families cannot afford leave.
× About 15% uptake by men ( 2% in 2000).
A Canadian Alternative
Quebec improved coverage, eligible if $2,000 income over last 52
weeks, including self-employed improved benefits; maximum 70-75% $62,000 reserved five weeks for fathers
Recommendation 2
Build on income support policies to reduce child and family poverty:
Raise welfare benefits Enhance family/in work tax credits and/or minimum wage
levels Make ECEC services available and affordable
strengthen and increase labour force attachment, increase (net) incomes: 2-earners = best insurance against poverty
Adapt employment standards to shorten full-time hours work/life balance & reduce family time poverty
Recommendations 3 & 4
As per South Australia and Cuba:
Build on ECD programs and services - pregnancy, parenting and early learning resources, screening and intervention, coalition and planning tables, etc
Coordinate and integrate with ECEC services
Specifically, prior to 18 months add universal monthly trajectory-based monitoring of ECD
USE EDI and other data as accountability framework to monitor effectiveness of policy implementation
Recommendation 5
Build on early childhood education and care to provide: universal access to quality ECEC, with inclusion, and seamless transitions to elementary school
For example:• full-employment-day Kindergarten for 5-, 4-, and 3-year-olds.• extend services to 18 month old children in time.
Source: Starting Strong ll: Early Childhood Education and Care; September 2006
Few spaces; Insufficient quality; High cost; Inadequate Inclusion
5 Policy Recommendations to Build On:
Family Time and Resources:
1. Parental leave
2. Income Supports
Community Supports:
3. ECD coalitions, planning
4. Pregnancy, parenting & intervention
5. EC education and care
Current Status in BC
Mid-ranked
Mid-ranked
Low-ranked
Strong Momentum
Bottom-ranked
Societal Benefits Relative to Public Investment in Comprehensive Family Policy Framework for Optimal Early Human Development
Rate of access to ECEC programs
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
BE FR IT UK DE DK SE NL HU NO AT CZ PT AU MX KR FI US IE CA
%
Data source: OECD. (2006). Starting Strong II: Early Childhood Education and Care. Country Profiles.AU, CZ, FI, HU, NL, UK – Estimated (averaged across ages 3-6)DE – Estimated (averaged across ABL and NBL)CA – Children 0-6 in child care including regulated family day care
Dr. Steve Barnett ConclusionsNIEER Results Presented in BC, October 24, 2008
Pre-K for all can be a strong public investment
Policy design affects benefits more than who is served
Pre-K for all is better for disadvantaged children
School failure is not just a poverty problem
All children benefit from quality pre-K
Education and child care policies must be joined
Cognitive and social-emotional goals for education
UNICEF Low Birthweight Benchmark: less than 6%
BC rate (2002) = 5% Canada rate (2004) = 5.9%
Source: (BC Provincial Health Officer, “A Review of Infant Mortality in British Columbia: Opportunities for Prevention”, 2003)
BC
UNICEF Infant Mortality Benchmark: 4/1000
BC rate (2002) = 4.4 Canada rate (2004) = 5.3
Source: (BC Provincial Health Officer, “A Review of Infant Mortality in British Columbia: Opportunities for Prevention”, 2003)
BC