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Jan. 20, 2006
by Helen Ward
Kids First Parent Association of Canada
604-291-0088
Daycare has become a top election issue for all parties.
The possibility that the daycare agreements will be terminated brings
on the accusation that this will hurt low-income families, like mine.
But the nouveau-left's knee-jerk support for daycare must have the corporate
right laughing all the way to the World Bankone of daycare's
powerful lobbyists working hard behind the scenes. The talk of relieving
"child poverty" is spin masking a different agenda. Preferentially funding
daycare over directly funding families is intended to create low incomes.
Royal Bank Vice President Charlie Coffey, explaining the connection
between big money and daycare at the World Bank symposium on Early Child
Development in Washington DC last September, said, "the idea is to merge
business and social ways of thinking." [1]
A family with two high-income parents may complain about daycare fees
of $700-1,000/month for infant care, but that is less than half of the
full cost when all operating, capital, regulation, training, evaluation,
research, lobbying, etc. are factored in. The family also gets another
$3,000 cash per child from the $7,000 Child Care Expense Deduction.
So their child care costs are subsidized by over $13,000/year per child.
Not to mention costs to the medical system of much higher rates of child
illness.
The mother of one baby on welfare in BC gets less: $845.58/month$10,152/yr.
For a second child, add $35. When her youngest is three, it's $0.[2]
Top daycare lobbyist, Dr. Martha Friendly, Coordinator of the Childcare
resource and Research Unit at the University of Toronto, says she is
concerned about the poor, but she is on record favouring income disparity:
"How do we see Canadian society? In my kids' public schools, there were
rich kids and poor kids. Isn't that what we want?" [3]
Children's Low Income rates are not associated with higher daycare funding:
Quebec spends $1,448 per child, 7 times as much as PEI ($216), 14 times
as much as Alberta ($104), and has higher child Low Income rates than
both of them: 19.6% for age 3-5 compared to 13.3 for PEI and 18.8 for
Alberta. [4]
Documents from the pro-market OECD colloquium bluntly titled "Putting
More Women to Work" and others spell out the real agenda: daycare is
to be funded by cutting so-called "maternalist" policies which gave
direct cash support for families in the form of welfare and child benefits.
Taking this money away from families is part of a policy package intended
to force more mothers into seeking more time in the cheap "flexible
workforce" of the global McJob economy, with daycare "(directly or indirectly)
subsidizing low wage employment ('welfare in work')".[5] Corporations
also seek to profit through Public-Private Partnership expansion into
providing and servicing daycare.[1] The unpaid and low-paid care-work
of women subsidizes the executives in both the profit and non-profit
daycare sectors.
Another top daycare promoter, Dr. Michael Krashinsky, also at the U
of T, is a promoter of work-fare, though he says cutting welfare rates
is more effective.[6] Though an NDP supporter [7], he believes in coercive
measures to fit people into the globalists' agenda: "Capitalism is and
always has been brutal….Whenever there has been change, people have
been ground up. People like stability, so to get them to leave a dying
industry or whatever, you have to burn them….[By way of analogy, farmers]
had to be hammered before they'd get off the land, had to really be
hurt." [8] This inhumanitarian lionized by the daycare right and left
alike chillingly envisions that "The old labour-intensive way of caring
for children…is no longer viable."[9]
The left would do us all a favour if it retreated from state-intervention
in the family and got on with the harder tasks in the economic realm:
remember Marx's focus on "the ownership of the means of production"?
The distribution of wealth and power? Instead of providing the troops
for the World Bankers, the left should focus on state-intervention needed
to counter the assault the corporate profit agenda has unleashed on
children and parents.
[1] speech text at http://www.rbc.com/newsroom/20050928coffey.html
video of speech at http://www1.worldbank.org/hdnetwork/External/cy/ccoffey.htm
[2] http://www.eia.gov.bc.ca/mhr/ia.htm
[3] "Ottawa Casts Net Wide for Daycare," National Post, Dec 8 2004
[4] Sources at http://www.kidsfirstcanda.org/blog-vol4.htm
and
http://www.childcarecanada.org/ECEC2004/tables_big/TABLE13.pdf
Child Low Income rates:
Alberta p113 http://www.childcarecanada.org/ECEC2004/pub_pdf/ECEC_2004_AB.pdf
Quebec p.55 http://www.childcarecanada.org/ECEC2004/pub_pdf/ECEC_2004_QC.pdf
PEI p 14 http://www.childcarecanada.org/ECEC2004/pub_pdf/ECEC_2004_PE.pdf
[5] "The OECD and the Reconciliation Agenda: Competing Blueprints,"
R. Mahon http://www.childcarecanada.org/pubs/op20/op20.pdf
p11.
[6] "Workfare may get votes but experts say it won't save money," Toronto
Star, June 3 1995, p.B1
[7] "NDP Lacks Candidates in Area," Ottawa Citizen, April 8 1995 p.C1
[8] "Brave New Workplace", The Toronto Star, April 24 1993
[9] The Benefits & Costs of Good Child Care, Cleveland & Krashinsky
http://www.childcarecanada.org/pubs/other/benefits/bc.pdf
p74
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