Please find below a comment from the Early Years Alliance in response to the Department for Education’s 2022 Childcare and Early Years Parent Survey, which can be read here. It shows the following:

Commenting Neil Leitch CEO of the Early Years Alliance, said:

“Today’s survey results show exactly what happens when you leave a sector underfunded and inadequately supported.

“Not only are almost a third of families with pre-school aged children struggling with early years costs, but 34% said there were not enough childcare and early years places. We know that nurseries, pre-schools and childminders doing all they can to both keep costs down for parents and provide flexible places, but when faced with years of underfunding and an ever-worsening recruitment and retention crisis, it is fast becoming an impossible task.

“What’s more, the fact only 60% of mothers with children under four said having reliable childcare helped them to work is deeply concerning, especially when considering the upcoming expansion of the 30-hour-offer. If the system is not working now, adding more hours while continuing to underfund providers is clearly only going to make the situation much worse.

“If the government truly values the importance of the early years it must urgently engage with the sector to ensure that families can benefit from early years places and providers are able to deliver high-quality places.”