One of the great achievements of the Labour government over the last decade has been the extension of childcare and flexible working rights to working parents. Right from the start we recognised that ensuring families had the flexibility of combining work and good quality care for their children would benefit society in general. This year the government went even further, granting extra flexible rights to parents with children under 16. In Gordon Brown’s speech to Labour Party Conference on 29 September 2009, he announced an extension of the entitlement to free childcare of 10 hours per week to 250,000 two-year olds from lower income families.

But this welcome move came with a hitch – in order to pay for the extension, the government said that they reform ‘old tax reliefs’. As we now know, this means phasing out the effective and popular tax relief for employer-supported childcare vouchers. These were introduced only a few years ago to give parents a better work-life balance by making registered childcare more affordable and accessible.

The current system is popular with employees and employers alike because it is flexible. They can be used to help parents with the costs of after school and breakfast clubs for young people up to the age of 16. A decision to abolish the current system could deprive over 330,000 parents of between £900 and £1,200 a year in support for childcare. Cutting tax relief for childcare vouchers will mean a very significant increase in household costs of childcare for middle-income families and there’s evidence of an outcry already – there are 66,000 signatures on the Downing Street e-petition to keep the vouchers to date.

Tax relief has helped stimulate the childcare industry through choice and diversity. The incentive is largely responsible for the growth of the employer-led childcare sector over the last decade. In 2003 just 8% of employers provided support for employees with childcare responsibilities, by the end of 2006 this stood at 36%, according to research undertaken for the HMRC. The line from the government is that relief for childcare vouchers is a ‘tax-break for the well-off’, because incentives are perceived as ‘poorly targeted’, even though the vast majority of parents on the basic tax rate benefit from the relief.

Phasing out the scheme would force some parents to choose between working and looking after their children or change their current flexible working arrangements – in the midst of a recession. We don’t have to choose between tax relief and extending childcare to two-year olds, we can have both – given the sums involved. Why should we deprive, mainly women, of the benefit of childcare vouchers even if they are on middle incomes? It’s flawed logic to remove tax relief for employer-supported childcare and goes against the grain of our policies, let’s hope the Government rethinks this retrograde step in the run-up to the Pre-Budget Report.