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The Albanese government is facing calls for more funding to help the childcare sector

The Albanese government is under pressure to help fix the workforce problems in the childcare sector.

Albanese government ‘laser-focused’ on delivering cost-of-living relief for families

The Albanese government is being called on to foot the bill to give childcare workers, among the country’s lowest paid workers, a significant pay rise as the sector faces critical staff shortages.

United Workers Union early learning director Carolyn Smith wants the federal government to fund a full 25 per cent pay rise for childcare staff, costing an estimated $2.3bn a year.

Ms Smith said low wages were forcing childcare staff to leave for better-paying jobs, leaving many childcare centres short-staffed and having to turn away children.

“Educators are barely able to survive on the wages they are paid amid soaring cost-of-living increases,’’ she told The Australian.

“As a result, turnover is going through the roof and workloads are unacceptably high.

“The government needs to commit to funding a real pay rise.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is facing new pressure to fund wage rises for childcare workers. Picture : NCA NewsWire / Nicki Connolly
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is facing new pressure to fund wage rises for childcare workers. Picture : NCA NewsWire / Nicki Connolly

The Albanese government is also under pressure to abolish the activity test for childcare subsidies in the upcoming May budget, with crossbenchers flagging a fight to push for universal child care in the next federal election.

Crossbench MPs and Greens senators detailed their plans to ramp up calls to dump means testing and occupational requirements for childcare subsidies by May 9.

The test requires parents to be working or studying full-time to be eligible for government-funded childcare subsidies.

CEO of The Parenthood Georgie Dent joined female leaders this week to urge reforms to the early childhood education and care sector . Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman
CEO of The Parenthood Georgie Dent joined female leaders this week to urge reforms to the early childhood education and care sector . Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman

The Women’s Economic Equality Taskforce, which was set up by the government to find ways to improve women’s financial status, recommended that the test be immediately scrapped in a landmark report published last year.

CEO of The Parenthood Georgie Dent said about 160,000 children from low-income households are being locked out of early education because of the policy.

“If you take a step back and consider we have got 20 per cent of children arriving at school developmentally vulnerable when we know that children with any form of disadvantage stand to benefit the most from high-quality early education and care,” she said.

“There is not an Australian in this country who doesn’t benefit from our children having their education and development supported.”

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is facing pressure to end the activity test for parents wanting childcare subsidies. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is facing pressure to end the activity test for parents wanting childcare subsidies. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage
Zoe Daniel says she’ll take universal childcare to the next election. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Zoe Daniel says she’ll take universal childcare to the next election. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman

Independent MP Zoe Daniel said she was currently in discussions with both Labor and the Opposition to gauge their support, urging the government to not use its recent extension of the paid parental leave scheme and pay women super when they go on maternity leave as “crumbs” to keep women happy.

“I would say the moves the government has made on super and paid parental leave are great but they’re not an excuse not to do other things,” Ms Daniel told NCA NewsWire.

“Doing a couple of bits of it is not going to unlock women’s workforce participation.”

Labor has flagged childcare reform as one of its key priorities. Picture: Dan Peled/NCA NewsWire.
Labor has flagged childcare reform as one of its key priorities. Picture: Dan Peled/NCA NewsWire.

Finance Minister Katy Gallagher has in the past acknowledged calls for the activity test to go but has not commit to making any changes at this stage

Her office has been contacted for comment.

The government has announced plans to introduce legislation to ensure that super is paid on parental leave payments starting July 2025, and recently expanded its paid maternity leave scheme by 26 weeks, which will kick during July 2026.

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/work/at-work/the-albanese-government-is-facing-calls-for-more-funding-to-help-the-childcare-sector/news-story/e453d5d886bf06fd42a6a3e9195f88ae