The Unkind Cuts

John Key can flippantly deflect media scrutiny of his Government’s unkind cuts to early childhood education by referring to the snip he himself has voluntarily undertaken, but many early childhood services are having to make hard decisions about how to deal with it all.

Qualified teachers are being replaced by the untrained, by attrition or redundancy; parent fee increases are coming; trips, meals and resources are being reduced or the costs off-set to parents as much as possible.  Those who have recently made the big commitment to train as teachers are facing difficult times, with employers deciding to stop supporting their studies part way through their training, or telling them they will continue on lower pay (think $14 per hr) even once they have qualified.  The Government has sent the market clear signals and it has heard them and acted accordingly.

Pity about the children who will bear the consequences of lower quality early childhood education and more difficulties participating in pre-school level education.  Not to mention the parents who will be re-calculating whether early childhood education is affordable for them, especially those who needed the cover to be able to seek paid work.

This year’s budget is not the first time early childhood education funding has been cut since this National-led government took power.  In both their first and second budgets this Government has given a little with one hand and taken a lot with the other.  Here’s a summary, based on the 2009 and 2010 Budget information for early childhood education put together by the Ministry of Education (all rounded to the nearest $M):

Funding cuts:

Total cuts in 2009 & 2010 budgets:  $623M

Funding increases:

Total increases in 2009 & 2010 budgets:  $204M

Thus in the term of this National-led Government they have cut $419M out of early childhood education in just their first two years in power.

To put this in context, there are around 4300 licensed early childhood services in New Zealand currently, and if these cuts were spread across them evenly (which they aren’t) then each service would be getting over $96,000 less over the next four years than they would have.

Some more figures, solely around the recent $295M worth of cuts to the centres which currently have 80% or more of their teachers trained in early childhood education:

There are estimates that put the return on investment of early childhood education in the realms of $13 for every $1 spent.  These benefits come in the areas of improved education outcomes, as well as downstream reductions in crime, social welfare, and health costs.

Spending $419M less means also writing off potential gains of $5.5 BILLION.

And the Minister of Finance, with the able nodding of the Minister of Education, thinks they have cut “low-quality spending”.  There’s a Tui billboard in that.

Some questions journalists should be asking everyone in cabinet:

The answers would be revealing.

Oh and how many vasectomy operations would $419M buy?   If this is the going rate, over 1 million.  What a snip.

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