Ahead of the local elections on April 7, Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced plans to expand a system of payments to parents of young children introduced under the previous government. He also says that previously promised childcare allowances to help mothers return to work are almost ready.
A system known as Family Care Capital was introduced in 2022 by the then Law and Justice (PiS) government. It offers parents of children aged between 12 and 35 months a total of 12,000 zloty (EUR 2,793) for their second and each subsequent child. Tusk says the programme will now also cover the first child.
“This year, every Polish child, without exception, will receive financial assistance from the state,” said the prime minister at an election campaign event for his Civic Coalition (KO) group in Krakow. “The era of exclusion is over and every Polish family will be able to count on state support.”
Tusk also referred to plans, announced while he was still in opposition last year, to introduce a system of childcare allowances to help mothers return to work. Dubbed “granny payments” (babciowe) – as grandmothers often care for children while mothers work – they would provide up to 1,500 zloty (EUR 349) a month.
The introduction of that benefit was one of the 100 policies that Tusk promised to introduce in his government’s first 100 days in office. However, when that deadline passed two weeks ago, only around a dozen of the promises had been fulfilled.
“We have just finished working on the so-called granny payments,” said the prime minister. “In a few days, at the next government meeting, we will approve this bill.”
He added that he hoped it would be finally introduced “just after the summer holidays”.
Tusk also said that, if a child’s parent wanted to sign a contract with the person employed to provide care, the state would additionally pay the necessary health contributions for a contract worth up to 1,500 zloty. The benefit would apply until the child can go to nursery at the age of three.
Tusk emphasised that the two systems of support – “granny payments” and Family Care Capital – would both be available to parents.
His government has also promised to protect the popular “800+” child benefit scheme introduced by the former Law and Justice (PiS) government that gives parents 800 zloty per month for each of their children.
When the system, initially called “500+”, was first introduced, it was criticised by Tusk’s Civic Platform (PO) party, which warned that it would be too expensive.
However, by the time of last year’s parliamentary elections that brought Tusk to power, PO had pledged to maintain PiS’s various social programmes. (Notes from Poland)