Charity warns parents in Greater Manchester are losing out on earnings due to childcare costs

Many can't afford to work because child care is so expensive.

Author: Victoria GloverPublished 23rd Jan 2018

There's a warning parents of young children across Greater Manchester are losing out on over a billion pounds in earnings each year because of the crippling price of childcare.

Save the Children warned that 65,000 mums and dads with kids under 5 across the North West are missing out on millions daily because of "a childcare system that feels stacked against them''.

Many say they would like to work, or work more, but that childcare is the key factor holding them back.

Steven McIntosh, Save the Children's director of UK poverty policy, advocacy and campaigns said: "Mothers describe a childcare system that feels stacked against them. They tell us it's nightmare to navigate with barriers to work at every turn.

"The result is an astounding loss in earnings, hitting families already battling to make ends meet. The financial pressure and stress that creates at home is never good for parents or their children. It's time to make childcare work for families.''

A Department for Education spokesman said: "We have doubled the free childcare available to working parents of three and four year olds to 30 hours a week, saving parents up to £5,000 a year per child, and over 200,000 children have already benefited from a 30 hours place since September.

"Our independent evaluation of the early rollout of 30 hours free childcare showed that nearly a quarter of mothers and one in 10 fathers increased their working hours as a result.

"We are tackling the barriers for parents to return to work by introducing shared parental leave, new rights to request flexible working and our £5 million returner programmes that will make it easier for people to get on with their careers after taking time out for caring.'