Study
| EST. READ TIME 2 MIN.Quebec’s experience with government-subsidized daycare a warning for B.C.
Subsidized Daycare—What British Columbia Can Learn from Quebec’s 20-Year Experiment
Main Conclusions
- British Columbia’s NDP government recently announced a series of new policies intended to lay the foundation for “universal”, government-subsidized, $10-per-day daycare across the province.
- This major policy intervention seems unnecessary as there does not appear to be a widespread lack of daycare spots in British Columbia: as of 2016, the province-wide average daycare vacancy rate was 30.9%.
- Moreover, Quebec’s ongoing, two-decade experiment with subsidized daycare shows that such a program is unlikely to be either affordable or successful. Quebec’s system is expensive: the government spends over $9,000 per child served, for a total cost of approximately $2.3 billion in 2017.
- Advocates nonetheless argue that subsidized daycare will increase maternal labour-force participation and generate tax revenue that offsets program costs; and that the program produces beneficial child-development outcomes.
- In reality, such a program is unlikely to pay for itself. The evidence from Quebec’s experience suggests that the tax revenues generated by increased maternal labour-force participation do not offset the full cost of the program.
- Evidence of long-lasting gains for child development from subsidized daycare is mixed and studies from Quebec show the program has contributed to significantly worse health and social-development outcomes.
- Although Quebec’s program is described as “universal”, in many areas there are still lengthy waiting lists for places in daycare facilities despite very high levels of government spending. Children from higher income families are more likely to obtain a place in daycare.
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Vincent Geloso
Assistant Professor of Economics, George Mason UniversityVincent Geloso, Senior Fellow of the Fraser Institute, is an Assistant Professor of Economics at George Mason University and earnedhis Ph.D. from the London School of Economics. Previously, he was assistant professor of economics at King's University College and Bates College. He earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Montreal.Professor Geloso specializes in the measurement of living standards today and in the distant past. He combines his specialization in economic history with a specialization in political economy in order to explain differences in living standards over time and space. His most recent articles have been published in Public Choice, Explorations in Economic History, European Review of Economic History, Contemporary Economic Policy and Southern Economic Journal. He has also authored opinion articles in the Journal de Montréal, Journal de Québec, National Post, Globe & Mail, Toronto Star, Gazette, Le Devoir, La Presse, Le Soleil, and Huffington Post Québec.… Read more Read Less…
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