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Dublin: 6 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Childcare Costs

# childcare-costs - Wednesday 24 April, 2013

From TheJournal.ie Childcare

500 subsidised childcare places come online

A total of 6,000 places will be available when the scheme is implemented in full.

# childcare-costs - Tuesday 7 August, 2012

From TheJournal.ie 9 At 9

The 9 at 9: Tuesday

Good morning… here’s nine stories to catch up on.

# childcare-costs - Thursday 19 July, 2012

From TheJournal.ie Opinion

Column: The Dept of Finance is either unable – or unwilling – to fix childcare

The Department of Finance is refusing to run the numbers on making childcare tax deductible. It’s not good enough, writes Stephen Donnelly.

# childcare-costs - Thursday 28 April, 2011

From TheJournal.ie 9 At 9

The 9 at 9: Thursday

Nine things you need to know by 9am: The HSE offers its sympathy to the family of a woman who died shortly after giving birth to a healthy daughter; tornadoes and storms ravage the US; the super-injunction celebrities named.

# childcare-costs - Friday 11 February, 2011

From TheJournal.ie Childcare

Childcare costs differ by 50 per cent in parts of the country

Costs can vary from region to region with Dublin being particularly expensive according to the National Consumer Agency

From TheJournal.ie 9 At 9

The 9 at 9: Friday

Nine things you need to know by 9am: Investigation launched into Cork air crash; another day of protests dawns in Egypt, and a teenage girl collapses and dies minutes after she is kissed for the first time.

# childcare-costs - Monday 23 August, 2010

IRISH PARENTS pay more for childcare than any other country in the Western world, according to a new survey by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Irish parents in two-income families pay nine times more than a family in Belgium to have their children looked after while they work.

The survey, which is published in today’s Irish Daily Mail, reveals that 45 per cent of the income in a double-earner household with two children is swallowed up by childcare costs.

This figure is based on a couple whose combined salary is one-and-a-half times the average industrial wage, and takes into account government subsidies.

The next most expensive country is Britain, where creche fees eat up 43 per cent of the annual household income. However, Britain tops the poll for single-income families. Switzerland, New Zealand and Canada come next in the poll, at 39 per cent, 36 per cent and 29 per cent respectively.

In Poland, by contrast, parents only pay 5 per cent of their annual income to have their children in daycare, while in heavily-subsidised Sweden, the figure is 8 per cent. In Germany and Luxembourg, less than ten per cent of the family income goes on childcare.

The average bill nationwide in Ireland is €7,500 – rising to an eye-watering €10,000 in Dublin. That’s €144 per week for child under 12, rising to €192 in Dublin.

That’s more than it would cost to send a child to secondary school at St Andrew’s College in Booterstown in Dublin, where the annual fees are €6,110.

Alternatively, you could send your child to Mount Anville or Castleknock College in Dublin for the same as you’d pay to have them in an average creche in the city.