A Sector Hanging in the Balance: Early Childhood Development and Lockdown in South Africa

4 months after the closure of ECD programmes, the sector was likely to be operating at less than a quarter of its pre-lockdown levels

Abstract

New evidence suggests that over four months after the closure of early childhood development (ECD) programmes on 18 March 2020, the ECD sector was likely to be operating at less than a quarter of its pre-lockdown levels. Of the 38 percent of respondents from the new NIDS-CRAM survey reporting that children aged 0-6 in their households had attended ECD programmes before the lockdown in March, only 12 percent indicated that children had returned to these programmes by mid-July, well after programmes were allowed to reopen. Using these findings, we estimate that just 13 percent of children aged 0-6 were attending ECD programmes by mid-July to mid-August compared to 47 percent in 2018. At this point it is not yet clear what proportion of these declines are only temporary, or whether there will be a lasting impact on ECD enrolment in South Africa. This dramatic contraction in the ECD sector relates to prohibitive costs to reopening ‘safely’ imposed by the regulatory environment, coupled with shocks to the demand side for ECD programmes (both in terms of reduced household incomes and parent fears of children contracting COVID-19). When viewed from a broader socio-economic lens, the threat of ECD programme closures across the nation will have impacts beyond ECD operators to the lives of millions of children, households and adults who rely on these ECD services. A swift intervention by government is necessary to save this important sector and limit the ripple effect of programme closures on multiple layers of society.

This work is part of the ‘Research on Improving Systems of Education’ (RISE) programme

Citation

Wills, G., Kotzé, J. and Kika-Mistry, J. 2020. A Sector Hanging in the Balance: Early Childhood Development and Lockdown in South Africa. RISE Working Paper Series. 20/055. https://doi.org/10.35489/BSG-RISE-WP_2020/055

A Sector Hanging in the Balance: Early Childhood Development and Lockdown in South Africa

Published 16 November 2020