The Labour Government’s early learning Pay Parity promise became unaffordable in June 2023, when the Ministry of
Education changed its method for calculating how much they would fund ECE teachers employed by independent education and
care centres.
“To see a funding shortfall of $253 million being labelled as a ‘discrepancy’ by Minister Tinetti was a surprise and
seems to down-play something significant - the breaking of Labour’s Pay Parity promise to 18,000 teachers” said Early
Childhood Council CEO Simon Laube.
A Ministry of Education Cabinet paper shines a light on how difficult this year’s secondary school industrial action was for the previous government, who did
not provision sufficient funds to fully honour the outcome of the secondary teachers’ settlement. The result is that
18,000 ECE teachers will miss out, with a further $306 million required in the next budget just for secondary, primary
and kindergarten teachers, but excluding the majority of ECE teachers.
The Labour Government’s commitment to an early learning funding review now looks like a veiled pre-condition before
they’d even contemplate further Pay Parity commitments, essentially saying ‘enough is enough’ on their promise of pay
parity for early learning teachers.
It becomes clearer now that the previous Pay Parity method was indeed built on flawed teacher data, based on average
salary increases and leading to clumsy marginal rate changes. This did not work well for smaller centres or those with
the most highly qualified and experienced teachers.
In June 2023, the Ministry changed their method to simply offering ECE centres the same funding rates as kindergartens
(until January 2024), with the cost determined by how many centres could make that work.
The latest data based on funding claims of ECE’s indicates that it doesn’t work for many - the Ministry’s own data
estimated 55% would opt-in, but only 35% have actually done so, indicating that centres aren’t confident about the Full
Pay Parity initiative.
Meanwhile, an average of ten early learning centres are shutting down every month, with 120 estimated to close in the
next year, a very high rate of closures.
“While it’s reassuring to see Labour’s focus in Pay Parity changing to being about parents getting secure access to
quality, affordable childcare – that change has come much too late and after the Pay Parity promise appears effectively
ended.”
“Disappointingly, the incoming government will find they have inherited a costly and complex problem to sort out, or
else centre closures will mount up and access issues will become even more real for parents. The pressure is on the
promised funding review to happen quickly and effectively.” said Simon Laube.