Pushing fathers to take their leave
Under the current system in Finland, maternity leave is 4.2 months, while fathers are given 2.2 months until the child turns two. On top of that, another six months' parental leave can be shared. However, on average only one in four fathers take what they are given. The current plans now talk only of parental leave. Each parent would receive 6.6 months' leave (164 days under Finland's six-day-week benefit system) and pregnant women would get an additional month's allowance. Parents would be allowed to transfer 69 days of their quota. Single parents would be allowed to use both allowances. Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin said last month that her country still had some way to go to achieve gender equality, and complained that too few fathers were spending time with their children when they were young.Rest of Europe heading the same way
Anne Lise Ellingsaeter, a University of Oslo professor who led a Nordic inquiry into parental leave, told the BBC that the Nordic countries had been leading the way on giving fathers entitlement that could not be transferred to the mother. The EU is also heading that way, with a 2019 directive giving member states three years to provide each parent with at least four months' leave, including two months that can not be transferred. Portugal already has a gender-neutral system, with 120 days paid at 100% of salary and another optional 30 days at 80% of salary. Prof Ellingsaeter said giving fathers increased rights had not been a complete success in the Nordic countries. "Norway was the first country in 1993 to have non-transferable leave for fathers and then Sweden followed suit. But Denmark instituted a father quota in 1998 and abolished it later, and it hasn't been re-introduced," she said. Fathers in Denmark get two weeks after a birth and the mother and father can share a further 32 weeks between them. Since December, Finland has been governed by a five-party coalition and each party is led by a woman. Ms Marin, 34, has said it is "not that big a deal" in Finnish terms to have women in power. The government estimates that the changes will cost an extra €100m ($110m). Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Estonia and Portugal were praised in a Unicef report last year for offering the best family-friendly policies. It ranked the UK, Ireland, Greece, Cyprus and Switzerland the lowest of 31 "rich countries".DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Let’s live peacefully and shame our saboteurs – Savannah executives of NPP, NDC
3 hours -
Reconstruction of Agona-Nkwanta-Tarkwa road 80 per cent complete
3 hours -
Internet penetration: 10.7 million Ghanaians offline – LONDA Report
3 hours -
USC cancels grad ceremony as campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza continue
3 hours -
Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction overturned in New York
3 hours -
US Supreme Court divided on whether Trump can be prosecuted
3 hours -
There’s enough justification for Affirmative Action Bill to be passed – Minka-Premo
3 hours -
Don’t allow people to manipulate you into vaccine hesitancy – Dr Adipa-Adappoe
3 hours -
Suspend implementation of Planting for Food and Jobs 2.0 for 2024 – Stakeholders
3 hours -
Parkinson’s disease no longer confined to the elderly – Public Health Physician, Dr Momodou Cham warns
3 hours -
Persons living with Parkinson’s disease appeal for support as they face stigmatization
4 hours -
36-year-old-trader sentenced for stealing employer’s money
4 hours -
9 signs you’re falling in love with someone who thoroughly enjoys emotional manipulation
4 hours -
Catholic Diocese of Keta Akatsi hosts Parkinson’s support group meeting
4 hours -
Wa Naa appeals to Akufo-Addo to audit state lands in Wa
4 hours