
Pupils of Excel
Academy in Nakuru County, Kenya prepare to go home on March 16, 2020
after the government ordered closure of all schools to combat spread of
coronavirus. Xinhua/Fred Mutune
global childcare crisis even worse," Henrietta Fore, head of the United Nations International Children's Fund (UNICEF) has warned.
The only option for millions of parents, particularly women working in the informal sector, who have no form of social protection available to them, is to bring their young children to work. More than 90 percent of women in Africa and almost 70 percent in Asia and the Pacific work in such a sector.
UNICEF is calling for giving all children access to affordable and quality childcare, from birth to their entry into the first grade of school. In the report, the agency is offering guidance for governments and employers on improving childcare and early childhood education policies.
Recommendations include the provision of high-quality and affordable childcare centers, paid parental leave for all parents, flexible work arrangements that address the needs of working parents, social protection systems, including cash transfers that reach families working in the informal sector.
"Education disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic is preventing children from getting their education off to the best possible start," said Fore. "Childcare and early childhood education build a foundation upon which every aspect of children's development relies. The pandemic is putting that foundation under serious threat," the UNICEF chief added.
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