The Government’s Gone Fishin’: The Absence of Work/Family Reconciliation Policy in the United States Janet C. Gornick Professor of Political Science and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Work-Family Reconciliation Policy and Gender Equality: A Cross-National Perspective Janet Gornick Professor of Political Science and Sociology, Graduate.
Advertisements

Contesting Time: International Comparisons of Employee Control of Working Time Peter Berg Michigan State University The Hawke Research Institute for Sustainable.
Are Europeans Lazy ? Or Americans Crazy? Final Remarks Guido Tabellini.
Trust Policy The Trust aims to maintain a workforce that is highly skilled, competent and flexible and one that puts the patient at the centre of maintaining.
Ministry of Education and Research Sweden Government Offices of Sweden Swedish Gender Equality Policy Maria Arnholm Minister for Gender Equality, Deputy.
Where to with leave policy? Peter Moss Institute of Education University of London 1.
The Scandinavian and the Anglo-Saxon Models
1 Reconciling Work and Private Life in EU Law and Policy Dr Eugenia Caracciolo di Torella School of Law, University of Leicester.
Precarity in Work and Life: Forging a New Reproductive Bargain Heidi Gottfried Wayne State University USA.
BENEFITS AND OTHER COMPENSATION ISSUES
EMPLOYMENT LAW UPDATE CIPD – 26 MARCH 2009 BECKY HODGKINS AND MICHAEL BRIGGS.
NGSU Regional Councils – Feb/Mar 2014 Employment Contracts Nationwide Group Staff Union.
Ministry of Employment Sweden Parental leave in Sweden Hanna Björknäs Division of labour law and work environment Ministry of Employment.
European Labour Law Lecture 06B. As the work on proposals on Directives on Part- time Work and Fixed-Term Contracts did not proceed (because of opposition.
1 Changing attitudes and perceptions about older workers AGE - the European Older People’s Platform Changing attitudes and perceptions about older workers.
E quality between Women and Men in the EU: recent developments 11th LPR Network seminar Tallinn, September 2014 Muriel Bissières, European Commission.
Basic Employment Law. The Standard  The Standard is enforceable under the Workplace Relations Act  Employers must provide entitlements.
1.3 Motivating Staff & Legislation. Pay: The legal requirements The law affects many aspects of pay. Employers need to be aware of these requirements.
Main aims of the module:  To overview the issues faced by carers in reconciling their commitments for work and responsibilities as a carer;  to create.
Family & Medical Leave Act 1. Purpose of this training It is essential for all employees to understand how to comply with FMLA and the City’s own FMLA.
Chapter 6 Pay, Benefits, and Working Conditions
Balancing work and family responsibilities in New Zealand Associate Professor Annick Masselot Hornby Rotary Club - 26 November 2014.
THE WORK-FAMILY BALANCE An Analysis of European, Japanese, and U.S. Work-Time Policies An EPI Briefing Paper by Janet C. Gornick, Alexandra Heron, and.
Chapter 10 Families and the Work They Do. Early America Early American family Seasonal work Farming and ranching All family members worked.
Domestic work – a legislative frame in the EU? ETUC Seminar Brussels, April 2005 Wiebke Düvel European Trade Union Institute for Research, Education.
Copyright ©2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or.
Work and Life Cross-national Differences. How do other countries compare to the U.S. in terms of work and life issues? At least 75 countries (not the.
Employment policy, labour market and free movement of workers European Social Policy Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague.
1 Maternity Protection Convention 2000, No ILO Standards on Maternity Protection Maternity Protection Convention, 1919 (No. 3) Maternity Protection.
A Strategy for Securing Sustainable Future Care and Productivity Potentials in an Ageing Society A European Comparison Annette Franke Goethe.
Statistics to Support Policies on Work and Life Balance Kyunghee Kim Employment Statistics Division Statistics Korea.
GENDER INDICATORS International Conference on Reconciliation: “Tips to top reconciliation: work it out, home it in: por una conciliación compartida”
The Collective Agreement for Supervisory Managers TEAM-IFPTE Local 161 September 19, 2012.
Decent Working Time for Women and Men: Balancing Workers’ Needs with Business Requirements Jill Rubery European Work and Employment Research Centre Manchester.
Employment Law Training Course Community Matters 27 September 2008 Why employment status matters Who is my employee? Contract of employment Types of employment.
Flexicurity in the context of social security Ministry of Welfare of the Republic of Latvia Riga,
Legal UNIT B HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT 4.01 Summarize labor laws and regulations that affect employees and management.
Young Children and their Services: developing a European approach A Children in Europe Policy Paper.
Main aims of the module:  To overview the issues faced by carers in reconciling their commitments for work and responsibilities as a carer;  to create.
Summary of the Submission on the Employment Relations (Flexible Working Hours) Amendment Bill by the bill’s author, Sue Kedgley, MP.
© OECD A joint initiative of the OECD and the European Union, principally financed by the EU Introducing a New Concessions System – Latvian Experience.
‘Mediating the Work/Life Collision: Some international policies and practices that work over the life course’ Barbara Pocock School of Social Sciences,
11 Work and Families Laura MacIntyre.
Working conditions of pregnant and nursing women in EU countries, Member States’ experience Genoveva Tisheva, Bulgarian Gender Research Foundation.
Labor Policy Keiichiro HAMAGUCHI. Chapter 4 Gender Policy.
Women in the workforce Julia Perry. National Foundation for Australian Women  To ensure that the aims and ideals of the Women's Movement and its collective.
Fighting child poverty across the OECD: is work the answer? Presentation: Joint OECD/Korea Regional Centre on Health and Social policy July 2006, Seoul.
Balancing Family and Work Chapter 20. Work Patterns 20:1.
International Labour Organization Women, Work and Families – An ILO Perspective Verena Schmidt Senior Specialist on Conditions of Work/ Gender Equality.
FMLA 12 weeks of unpaid leave during a 12 month period At the end of the leave, employees are to be reinstated to the same or equivalent (not similar!)
Office of Attorney General Maura Healey Earned Sick Time Law.
1 An OECD view on parental childcare Presentation for “Parental Childcare and Employment Policy Conference: Collision or Complementarity?” Prague, Czech.
Equality between women and men EU Efforts in Gender Equality Karolina Vrethem DG Enlargement 14 October 2014.
Can the state set decent standards for gender equality? Jill Rubery European Work and Employment Research Centre Manchester Business School University.
An overview of some of the basic rights and responsibilities of employees.
The rights of Migrant and Domestic Workers How ILO standards can make a difference.
The organizational level as a key factor shaping individual capabilities for WLB Organizational (firm/employer level)  Working-time policy, including.
Recent Developments in Employment and Labor Policies Lee, Chaepil Minister of Employment and Labor of Korea.
European Commission Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities ─ Unit G21 Parental leave – new proposal for a Directive.
The Impact of the EU Social Investment Package on Childcare: Going Beyond the Economic Imperative? Annick Masselot Associate Professor in Law, University.
Jean Monnet Chair of EU Labour Law Academic Year Silvia Borelli:
A NEW START TO SUPPORT WORK_LIFE BALANCE OF PARENTS AND CARERS
Employee statutory rights and responsibilities
Gender, Employment, and Work-Family Policy: Lessons from Europe:
REPUBLIC OF SLOVENIA MINISTRY OF LABOUR, FAMILY,
Colette Fagan and Helen Norman University of Manchester, UK
European Labour Law Jean Monnet Chair of EU Labour Law Academic Year Silvia Borelli:
European Labour Law Jean Monnet Chair of EU Labour Law Academic Year Silvia Borelli:
Men and Reconciliation in the Netherlands
An OECD view on parental childcare
Presentation transcript:

The Government’s Gone Fishin’: The Absence of Work/Family Reconciliation Policy in the United States Janet C. Gornick Professor of Political Science and Sociology, CUNY Director, Luxembourg Income Study THE WORK FAMILY DILEMMA: A BETTER BALANCE FEBRUARY 1-2, BARNARD COLLEGE

US workers spend exceptionally long hours at work each year. -- We “outwork” our counterparts across Europe and even in Japan. -- We work longer hours each week and (even more so) more weeks per year. -- Are we productive? The US ranks 8 th in the OECD in output-per-worker-hour.

US parents are no exception. -- US fathers AND mothers have comparatively high employment rates. -- US dual-earner couples with children work the longest hours: 81 on average. -- 2/3 of US dual-earner couples work, jointly, more than 80 hours per week.

Workers in several other industrialized countries are protected by measures that limit working time, ensure compensated breaks to care for young children, raise the quality and availability of employment with reduced-hour and flexible schedules, and provide support for child care A variety of policy levers are in place: regulation of “standard work week” entitlements to paid days off (EU mandated) family leave rights & benefits (EU mandated) part-time parity measures (EU mandated) rights to part-time and flexible schedules early childhood education and care

Public policy shapes workers’ weekly hours and annual work days. Regulated hours are a strong predictor of actual hours. -- US public policy sets a long work week, and is silent on paid days off.

Public policy is a crucial vehicle for securing working parents time for caregiving, especially during children’s earliest years. -- US family leave policy is exceptionally meager. -- The lack of paid leave restricts American parents’ options. Many must choose between losing their pay or placing their newborns in child care.

In the European Union countries, national measures require pay and benefit parity for part-time workers. -- US law offers very few protections for part-time workers. -- In the US, many are poorly paid and receive no benefits. COUNCIL DIRECTIVE 97/81/EC of 15 December 1997 concerning the Framework Agreement on part-time work concluded by UNICE, CEEP and the ETUC THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Clause 1: The purpose of this Framework Agreement is: (a) to provide for the removal of discrimination against part-time workers and to improve the quality of part-time work; (b) to facilitate the development of part-time work on a voluntary basis and to contribute to the flexible organization of working time in a manner which takes into account the needs of employers and workers. Clause 4: Principle of non-discrimination: 1. In respect of employment conditions, part-time workers shall not be treated in a less favourable manner than comparable full-time workers solely because they work part time unless different treatment is justified on objective grounds. 2. Where appropriate, the principle of pro rata temporis shall apply.

Several countries grant workers the right to alter their work hours; some grant workers the right to request changes to their work hours. Key examples: The gold standard: Sweden: The Child Care Leave Act, And the so-called soft-touch laws: The Netherlands: The Working Time Adjustment Act, Germany: The Part-Time and Fixed-Term Employment Act, United Kingdom: The Right to Request Flexible Working, 2002 (Employment Act amendments). (see, e.g., Hegewisch issue brief, 2005)

Public policy influences parents’ ability to manage their time demands by providing early childhood education and care. -- US provides very little publicly-subsidized child care before kindergarten. -- The quality of private child care is highly variable and often poor.