Skip to content
Government Federal

MEDIA RELEASE: PRODUCTIVITY COMMISSION’S EARLY CHILDHOOD REPORT SIGNALS A HUGE STEP FORWARD FOR AUSTRALIA

The Brotherhood of St. Laurence 2 mins read

The Brotherhood of St. Laurence (BSL) welcomes the Productivity Commission’s Early Childhood Education and Care inquiry final report.

The report is a huge step forward for Australia. If implemented, the recommendations would benefit the children, households and communities BSL works with every day – many of whom experience disadvantage and/or intergenerational poverty.

Importantly, the Productivity Commission recognises the value of early childhood development for all children, whatever their background, and that our investment in children has benefits that multiply across their lifetimes and across generations. This is economic and social reform of the highest order. As a country, we have underestimated those benefits for too long.

Indeed, there is a strong case to be bolder than the Productivity Commission recommends. The strength, generosity, inclusiveness and quality of a universal early childhood system is a necessary condition for growing our national prosperity, for reducing poverty in Australia and for ensuring every child can live the life they aspire to. 

The government must prioritise universal access to an equitable, affordable and inclusive early childhood development system which incorporates all services and supports available to young children and families. It is the combination of these supports, from as soon as a child is born, that will make sure no child is left behind.

We are especially supportive of the Commission’s recommendation to abolish the activity test entirely. Substantial evidence exists regarding the negative impact of the punitive activity test, which often prevents children in low-income families from accessing quality early childhood education and care.

“The Federal Government must heed the Productivity Commission’s call and put a stop to the activity test. What a parent does or earns should never hinder the access their child has to quality education and care in their early years,” said BSL Executive Director Travers McLeod.

Reforms to our early years systems must be transformational, requiring collaboration across governments and across political parties. We welcome the recommendation for an Early Childhood Education and Care Commission to improve coordination and monitor progress towards universal access.

The Federal Government’s comprehensive Early Years Strategy, released earlier this year, indicates a commitment to reform and is an acknowledgement that the current approach is not working. Now is the time to urgently make the necessary changes to deliver a system where the children most in need of early childhood education opportunities are enabled to receive them.

We look forward to reviewing the full report and recommendations and helping with the next phase of reform.

For media enquiriessteph.jones@bsl.org.au or 0482 163 395.

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 04/10/2024
  • 09:58
Doctors Reform Society

Greens Primary Health Care Policy: A Welcome Change of Direction

The Doctors Reform Society of AustraliaPO Box 591Ermington NSW 1700ph (02) 9613 8305fax (02) 9613 8305 drs@drs.org.au Greens Policy: A Change indirection for Primary Health Care “Whilst the new Greens policies to support Medicare item numbers and bulk billing incentives would bring some immediate relief to patients struggling to access affordable primary care, it is the longer-term goal of establishing entirely public Primary Health Care centres that could be the gamechanger our health care system badly needs” says Dr Scott Douglas, President of the Doctors Reform Society. “Fee-for-service is not an efficient or equitable approach to providing high quality health…

  • Government Federal
  • 02/10/2024
  • 19:01
Older Persons Advocacy Network (OPAN)

PEAK ADVOCACY BODY: MANDATED CARE MINUTES “THE BARE MINIMUM”

MEDIA RELEASE Wednesday, 2 October 2024 PEAK ADVOCACY BODY: MANDATED CARE MINUTES “THE BARE MINIMUM” The Older Persons Advocacy Network (OPAN) has described reports that aged care providers are failing to meet mandated care minute targets as “deeply troubling”. “It’s been a year since the mandatory target of 200 minutes of direct care per day per aged care resident came into effect,” said OPAN CEO Craig Gear OAM. And now from 1 October, it is expected thatagedcare providers increase their care minutes to an average of 215 minutes per resident, per day,including at least 44 minutes of care provided by…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 02/10/2024
  • 17:28
Speaker of the House of Representatives

Speaker takes Parliament to the Gold Coast

Tomorrow, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Honourable Milton Dick MPis on the Gold Coast, as part of theParliament in Schoolsprogram. Students will learn about federation, democracy and theAustralian Parliament, as well as hear first-hand from the Speaker and their local member on what a typical day looks like in their electorate and when they are in Parliament House for sitting weeks. The Speaker will be visiting Marymount Catholic Primary School in Burleigh Waters with theHon Karen Andrews MP, Member for McPhersonand Ashmore State School in Ashmore withMs Angie Bell MP, Member for Moncrieff. Quotes attributable to the…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.