"Baby bonus" or paid parental leave--which one is better?
Callister, Paul ; Galtry, Judith
Abstract
New Zealand's paid parental leave policy was introduced in
2001. Since then it has been altered a number of times, including an
extension to its length and a loosening of eligibility criteria. Given
that some parents continue to be ineligible for leave, there have been
calls for further expansion of the eligibility criteria and an increase
in the length of leave. Australia does not currently have a paid
parental leave scheme. Instead it has a "baby bonus" as well
as job protection legislation. Through this combination most core jobs
are protecte, and, with the exception of very-high-income families,
there is a payment for all new parents. While this gives rise to some
middle-class capture, the Australian policy provides support to parents
who most need it, including those on the margins of the labour force.
New Zealand's scheme also has an element of middle-class capture,
but with those disqualified from receiving payments or receiving the
lowest payments, being among those families most in need.
INTRODUCTION
The issue of paid parental leave is a topical policy concern in
both Australia and New Zealand. In New Zealand the ongoing discussions
focus on extending the current paid parental leave scheme in terms of
both length and eligibility criteria. (2) In Australia the question is
whether to introduce a federal paid parental leave scheme. Informing the
New Zealand discussions, in 2007 two major reports on parental leave
were published, one by the Department of Labour and the other by the New
Zealand Families Commission. (3) A further report by the National
Advisory Council on the Employment of Women was published in June 2008
(NACEW, 2008). While all the reports have included concerns about child
and maternal health, historically parental leave policy has not been
explicitly recognised by the Ministry of Health as an important health
issue for infants, mothers and, by extension, their families. Parental
leave has been framed primarily as a labour market concern in many
countries, and this is perhaps one reason why parental leave design does
not appear to be high on the current priority list of New Zealand health
policy makers. Yet by not having a strong input from the health sector,
the design of parental leave policy may not be optimal.
Internationally, the issue of paid parental leave, and its design,
was first considered over a century ago. For example, in 1877
Switzerland passed legislation that restricted women's paid work
two weeks before and six weeks after the birth of a child. A number of
European countries followed with similar policies. In 1919 the
International Labour Organization (ILO) was formed, and the Maternity
Protection Convention was among the policies developed during the first
year of the ILO's existence. In New Zealand, debates about paid
parental leave have also taken place over a long period of time
(Callister and Galtry 2006). During this time there have been major
changes in the operation of labour markets, family types, the roles of
men and women in both paid and unpaid work, fertility, and thinking
about the delivery of support to parents and children, with a greater
focus on targeted rather than universal benefits (Pool et al. 2007). In
addition, research has now provided a much better understanding of the
potential health benefits associated with parental leave. Some of these
changes challenge the original conceptualisation of paid parental leave
schemes.
Drawing on the Department of Labour and Families Commission
reports, as well as a number of other studies of parental leave, three
models of financial support for new parents are considered here. One is
the model operating in 2008 on the other side of the Tasman. This
involves legislation for job protection as well as a separate universal
"baby bonus". The second model involves linking paid parental
leave primarily to eligibility for job protection, as in New Zealand. In
effect, this is a targeted form of income support based on recent work
history. A third option is a payment for time out of paid work, based on
need. This paper considers which model is best for New Zealand parents
and children.
NEW ZEALAND: WHAT IS THE AIM OF PARENTAL LEAVE?
The Department of Labour's evaluation of parental leave notes
that the primary objectives of the Parental Leave and Employment
Protection Act 1987 have evolved in response to changes in both families
and paid work. The key objectives of the Act, and subsequent amendments
set out in that report, are to assist the attainment of:
* gender equity within the labour market, with increased female
labour-force retention and the opportunity to return to paid work
without disadvantage to position or pay
* gender equity within families, with fathers sharing leave and
caring responsibilities
* improved health outcomes for both mother and child, with the
ability for mothers to recover from childbirth, bond with a new baby,
and resume paid work without negative consequences to her own or her
child's health
* income stability for families through the provision of financial
security during the leave period (Department of Labour 2007:8).
Given the Department of Labour's primary focus on employment,
it is not surprising that gender equity in the labour market is listed
first. Although the Families Commission's report mirrors these four
goals, it combines the two gender equity aims and, perhaps reflecting
less of a labour market emphasis, places the goals in a different order
(p. 7). First is maternal and child health, next is income stability,
and last is gender equity. Determining which policy goal, or goals, is
the most important clearly matters to the design of paid leave,
especially because there can be some tensions between the various aims.
In particular, the design of parental leave can either create tension
between supporting maternal and child health and gender equity, or help
reduce this tension (Callister and Galtry 2006).
In New Zealand, as in many other countries, there are two
components to paid parental leave. First there is job protection. This
is the statutory right to return to the same job with the same terms and
conditions after a period of leave. Second is payment for time out of
the labour market. In the early days of parental leave in New Zealand it
was only job protection that was available, but when a payment became
available for the first time in 2002 the two components were linked. As
of 2007, in order to be eligible for a payment a person had to be
eligible for job protection. However, as an extra dimension to New
Zealand's leave policy, the eligibility criterion for 14
weeks' paid leave is less stringent than the criterion entitling an
individual to 52 weeks of job protection. To be eligible for paid
parental leave (PPL), employees must have worked continuously with the
same employer for an average of at least 10 hours a week (including at
least one hour in every week or 40 hours in every month) in the six or
12 months immediately before the baby's expected due date or the
date the employee has assumed the care of a child they intend to adopt.
However, employees who have worked continuously with the same employer
for 12 months or more are also entitled to up to 52 weeks of
employment-protected unpaid parental leave, less any paid parental leave
taken. As discussed, the eligibility criterion for the 14 weeks'
paid leave period--but not the 52 weeks of job protection--has been
based on a six-month reference period. After much lobbying by a range of
groups, in 2006 the self-employed also became eligible for paid parental
leave. (4) Naturally the state cannot protect the jobs of the
self-employed, so this represents some separation of payment from job
protection. However, there is an assumption that these self-employed
parents will remain attached to the labour market.
A fundamental question is whether paid leave should be a universal
right for all parents, or targeted, as in New Zealand, on the basis of
attachment to the labour market. This is a particularly important issue
in countries that have relatively flexible labour markets. OECD surveys
have shown that entitlement to both job protection and income support
has often been conditional on previous work experience undertaken on a
continuous and full-time basis, yet contingent and/or non-standard work
is common in many countries. (5)
If income support is seen as societal recognition that parents lose
income from paid work in order to care for children, then there is some
reason to link payments to work history. This approach potentially
recognises that the opportunity costs associated with "time
out" of paid work vary. High-income parents who have invested
heavily in their education and subsequent careers potentially lose more
money than low-income parents when they take time out of paid work. They
may therefore need to be compensated at a higher rate. However, there
remains a question as to whether all paid work history--and possibly
even unpaid work--should be considered. The history of parental leave
policies in New Zealand shows a gradual extension of employment-based
eligibility criteria. For example, in late 1979, when the National Party
introduced the original Maternity Leave and Employment Protection Bill,
the proposed legislation had very tight employment-based eligibility
criteria. In the original draft, employees had to serve 24 months with
an employer and work full-time (defined as 35 hours per week). (6) In
late 1986 the Labour Government enacted the Parental Leave and
Employment Protection Bill. The Bill was introduced with a reduction in
the eligibility criteria to 12 months' service and, originally, 15
hours' minimum paid work per week. This was then reduced to 10
hours in the final legislation.
The arguments for basing payment on strict employment and
time-period eligibility criteria are undermined when a significant
number of potential new parents find themselves in contingent employment
and are thus ineligible for paid parental leave or, equally, have been
in paid work but are not employed in New Zealand during the eligibility
period. Although not all those in contingent or non-standard work are
unskilled low-paid workers, unless there is some alternative form of
income support it is this group that will be most disadvantaged if they
are ineligible for paid parental leave.
In the Department of Labour's 2007 evaluation of paid parental
leave, a quarter of expectant mothers did no paid work during the
required eligibility period for paid parental leave (six months). (7)
This does not mean they had no attachment to the labour market. With
delayed childbearing the majority of mothers will have spent some time
in paid work before having a child. In fact they may have had a long
previous attachment and simply have been made redundant and unable to
find a job in this period. Or, they may have been attached, but decided
to stay at home with a first child and were thus heavily involved in
unpaid work, including the health-promoting work of breastfeeding. (8)
But as Marilyn Waring (1988) has noted, the unpaid work of breastfeeding
"counts for nothing".
In addition, New Zealand's very large diaspora of women in
prime childbearing ages means that some of these women will have
undertaken much of their paid work overseas but may not be eligible for
paid parental leave when they return, or consider returning, to New
Zealand. (9) Finally, there may be mothers in couples who are not in
paid work, but who experience pressure to return to work with young
children if their partner is made redundant. When, as in the past, there
were narrow eligibility criteria for job protection, the majority of new
parents missed out. With more expansive eligibility criteria far fewer
parents now miss out, but those that do are often among the most
vulnerable groups in society. They will not only be ineligible for
taxpayer-funded leave but, even if in employment before giving birth or
adopting a child, are also highly unlikely to be eligible for
employer-funded leave. In New Zealand the middle class, particularly
those in government agencies, are the most likely to receive both public
and private payments while on parental leave. The potential unfairness
of a labour market-related system is reinforced the longer the period of
paid parental leave.
As noted, one goal of parental leave is to support maternal and
child health. But does New Zealand's parental leave policy do this?
In terms of length of leave, the literature on pregnancy, childbirth and
maternal recovery suggests that optimal leave duration will vary
according to a wide range of factors, including the relative ease or
difficulty of the individual's pregnancy and childbirth. However,
there is some indication that the optimal length of leave is likely to
be in the order of months rather than weeks or days, particularly
post-birth. Assessing the design of parental leave, including length of
leave, in relation to child health is equally difficult, given all the
influences on health outcomes. But breastfeeding has an impact on child
health, and breastfeeding guidelines give some idea of the optimal
length of leave (Galtry 1995 2003, Galtry and Callister 2005).
International recommendations advise six months of exclusive
breastfeeding (i.e., breast milk without any additional fluid or food),
with continued breastfeeding up to two years of age and beyond (World
Health Organization 2003).
Although not directly linked to parental leave, in 2007 the
Government designated several priority areas for health improvement that
have direct relevance to the issue of parental leave. These include
improving child health and reducing inequalities. As part of this the
Government has established 10 health target areas for 2007/08 to help
measure progress towards achieving these priority areas (Ministry of
Health 2007). One is "improving nutrition", with an increase
in breastfeeding rates seen as being an essential component of achieving
this particular health target. There are concerns that in New Zealand
only 12% of New Zealand infants are exclusively breastfeeding at six
months, while 40% receive no breast milk whatsoever. Qualitative
research, undertaken as part of an evaluation of parental leave policies
in New Zealand, indicates that for most parents the focus for the first
three months after birth (14 weeks of which can be supported through the
current paid parental leave scheme) is the health of the baby, with many
regarding breastfeeding as critical to this. Quantitative research from
the same evaluation showed that 84% of new mothers rated establishing
breastfeeding as important or very important in decisions regarding
leave (84%) (Department of Labour 2007). However, when mothers who
actually took PPL were asked about their attitudes towards parental
leave, nearly a fifth thought that the paid leave period did not give
them sufficient time to establish breastfeeding, while a third said it
was an insufficient period for post-birth recovery (ibid). Similarly,
almost 90% of new fathers saw parental leave as important for
establishing breastfeeding, but that if leave periods are too short this
creates potential tensions for gender equity. A similar proportion
thought that for reasons of breastfeeding it was more important for
mothers rather than fathers to take leave.
Taking these issues into account, the Families Commission
recommended that eligibility for payment be relaxed to include those who
have worked for any employer or have been employed for 26 out of 52
weeks prior to birth or adoption. It also recommended the removal of the
minimum hours test. (10) Having statutory protection for some jobs is
clearly important. However, for a variety of reasons some jobs are not
worth protecting and/or cannot be protected. There are also advantages
to a nation from having a flexible labour market. Extending protection
too far brings the risk of detrimental effects on the economy and
employment. Perhaps in recognition of this, the Families Commission is
not suggesting that the eligibility criteria for the 52-week job
protection be extended; simply that the labour market eligibility
criteria for the period of paid leave be extended.
The Families Commission has estimated that changes in eligibility
would increase the proportion of employed women who qualify for paid
parental leave from 75% to around 82%. But, as noted, not all mothers,
including many who have had a significant labour market attachment, are
employed in the eligibility period. When the Families Commission's
report was released the Government indicated support for expanding the
eligibility criteria: "It's a priority for the Labour-led
Government to ensure paid parental leave can be accessed by even more
working parents--no matter what their working arrangements" (Dyson
2007).
In the past there were good reasons for eligibility for paid
parental leave to be linked to recent labour market attachment, but does
this still make sense? One of the historical reasons for having labour
market attachment criteria was to encourage women to maintain a
long-term attachment to the labour market; that is, to return to paid
work after a period of leave. But the 2006 Department of Labour's
evaluation of PPL showed that most mothers return to paid work
regardless of their eligibility for leave. At the time of the survey 80%
of mothers were eligible for PPL, about 80% took leave (about half of
those who did not take leave resigned), and of those who took leave, 80%
returned to work. However, about half of those who did not take PPL also
returned to work within 18 months. Of the 20% of mothers who were
ineligible, just under a third took some sort of other leave, but 97%
returned to work. Of those who were ineligible and took no leave, just
fewer than 60% returned to work within 18 months. It is not surprising
that most mothers return to paid work regardless of whether they are
eligible for leave. Some will be career oriented and return for this
reason, but many will be in families that are reliant on their earnings.
Historically, women worked until they had their first child, then they
resigned. Now most women are engaged in paid work at various stages over
their whole life cycle.
Another problem with having an employment-based eligibility
criterion is simply the transaction costs for employers, employees and
the Government in determining parental eligibility. The additional costs
of moving from the 82% coverage suggested by the Families Commission to
the 100% coverage of a universal scheme have to be weighed against the
potential reduction in transaction and compliance costs. It would be
useful if these costs could be estimated when considering parental leave
options.
In contrast to a labour market approach, viewing parental leave
from a health perspective encourages the disengagement of parental leave
payment from an employment-based eligibility criterion. There may well
be some health effects for fathers associated with having a period of
leave, such as improved emotional wellbeing through being able to bond
with their infant. However, the health literature, including that cited
in the Families Commission's report, generally focuses on the
effects on women and children.
As discussed, having leave from paid work can have an impact on
pregnancy, recovery from birth, the ability to isolate young infants
from possible sources of infection by looking after them at home (a
gender-neutral activity), and the ability of mothers to breastfeed their
children. While the costs in terms of ill health can be high for
individuals, these costs also have an impact on the wider society,
either through private health insurance premiums or through taxes to
support public health-care programmes. The health perspective suggests
the need for universal extension of paid leave to all new parents.
Specifically, the support of breastfeeding suggests providing income
support for at least six months. If there is to be any targeting it
would be based on income, and the aim would be to ensure
parents--primarily mothers--could have a period detached from the labour
market. Table 1 shows some of the differing goals of parental leave, and
their policy implications.
In Europe there have been examples of "cash-for-care"
programmes, where income support has not been related to an
individual's previous employment history (Salmi and Lammi-Taskula
1999, Fagnani 1999). There are also some examples of paid parental leave
being provided (at a lower rate) to parents who are not eligible for job
protection (ibid). In addition, the OECD is currently investigating
"conditional" parental leave payments. (11) Rather than being
linked to eligibility criteria, such as employment history, these
payments are conditional on parents meeting criteria such as taking
children to health checks, completing immunisation programmes or, more
contentiously, breastfeeding exclusively for six months. While
"cash-for-care" schemes currently tend to be low-paid and
relatively long, they could instead be designed to be well paid, to
provide universal coverage for anyone having or adopting a child, but to
be relatively short. Cash-for-care schemes have been discussed in New
Zealand. For example, in the latter part of 1975, as part of the lead-up
to the general election, the Government introduced a new concept, that
of a child-minding allowance to be paid to mothers (Bassett 1976). This
was part of a separate, but related, debate about paying a
"mothers' wage" which was taking place at that time
(Kedgley 1996). In more recent times the Domestic Purposes Benefit has,
to some extent, been a form of "cash for care".
AUSTRALIA
As of late 2008 Australia does not have government-funded paid
parental leave. However, Australia does have job protection legislation.
To apply for a period of up to 52 weeks of unpaid parental leave, an
Australian employee is required to have completed at least 12 months of
continuous service with their employer by the expected date of birth.
(12) Unlike New Zealand, there are no required hours-of-work criteria.
In Australia the entitlement to parental leave can be extended to
eligible casual employees. An eligible casual employee is defined as a
casual employee who has worked on a regular and systematic basis for at
least 12 months (or a sequence of periods totalling at least 12 months)
with the same employer and has a reasonable expectation of continuing
employment with the employer (other than the period of parental leave).
Although Australia does not have a paid parental leave scheme, it
does have a payment that could be considered to be a universal cash for
care scheme or, for those taking unpaid parental leave, as income
support for part of the leave period. This is the so-called "baby
bonus". If a person is eligible for job protection, then the baby
bonus serves as a form of paid parental leave. Those ineligible for job
protection also receive this payment. But given that the bonus is not
linked to job protection eligibility, it does mean parents can take
little or no leave from paid work and still obtain full payment. This
means that parents are not compelled to take time out of paid work.
Similarly, New Zealand parents, even if eligible for paid parental
leave, do not need to take time out of work if they choose.
The baby bonus was not introduced as part of a parental leave
package, but rather as an inducement to increase fertility rates. In
tracing the introduction of the baby bonus, Jackson (2006) notes that
the Maternity Payment (the baby bonus) was introduced in 2004 and
replaced the First Child Tax Refund. It initially provided a A$3,000
grant for each new child (irrespective of the parity of the child),
rising to A$4,000 in 2006/07 and $A5,000 in 2008/09. This was part of a
package that included an increase in all levels of the Family Tax
Benefit (an intervention from 2000 associated with the introduction of
the GST), bringing the base payment up to $A1,695 per year inclusive of
a new, immediate lump-sum payment of $A600, as well as improvements to
childcare provision. In its first budget the incoming Labour government
confirmed that the baby bonus would rise to $A5,000 at the start of
2009. However, from this date the bonus would be means tested, with the
payment only going to parents with a combined income of less than
$A150,000. In addition, instead of a lump sum payment there would be 13
fortnightly payments of $A385. (13)
Although having a generous amount of paid parental leave can be
important for supporting child and maternal health, international data
suggest that there is no simple relationship between paid parental leave
(or the lack of it) and breastfeeding rates (Galtry 2003). In a period
when there was only job protection available and no baby bonus,
breastfeeding initiation rates were relatively high in Australia but,
like New Zealand, duration rates were considered to be relatively low.
According to the 2001 National Health Survey, at discharge from hospital
83% of infants were breastfeeding (Donath and Amir 2005). The same
survey showed that 49% of infants were breastfed at 25 weeks after birth
and 25% at one year. At 25 weeks only 18% of Australian infants were
fully breastfed, but this was nearly double the New Zealand rate.
Whether the baby bonus has had any influence on breastfeeding rates in
Australia has yet to be determined. However, Australian research does
indicate that maternal employment in the first six months of life
contributes to premature cessation of breastfeeding, even when
controlling for known risk factors for breastfeeding cessation (Cooklin
et al. 2008).
In its 2007 report, the New Zealand Families Commission did not
consider the baby bonus to be paid parental leave. However, when its
actual effect is considered, along with the job protection available
across the Tasman, in early 2008 Australia appeared to have the best of
both worlds. It had, like New Zealand, job protection for those jobs
that are worth protecting, as well as a universal payment for all
parents. Given that the payment is at a fixed level, those Australian
parents who gain the most in a relative sense are either on the margins
of the labour market, on low incomes, or not in paid work at all. In
contrast, in New Zealand those who gain most absolutely are those in the
middle-income brackets with comparatively strong labour market
attachments, and those who gain the most relatively are those who are
eligible for PPL but on low incomes. This is because in New Zealand
payment is not only related to attachment to the labour market but also
to income (with a cap). Therefore low-income earners have a higher
proportion of their incomes replaced. From July 2007 the maximum payment
in New Zealand has been $NZ5,477.92 (or $391.30 per week for 14 weeks),
and it is estimated that over 90% of those who take PPL get this amount.
This is similar to the payment that is proposed go to almost all parents
in Australia from January 2009.
In parallel to the changes to the baby bonus, in 2008 the
Australian Productivity Commission was asked to examine options for a
paid parental leave scheme. This included considering the merits of the
New Zealand scheme. In its September 2008 draft recommendations, the
Commission recommended 18 weeks of paid parental leave, four weeks more
than the period of leave in New Zealand. An additional two weeks would
be available as paternity leave, and would be reserved for the father
(or other eligible partner) on a 'use it or lose it' basis.
Families not eligible for paid parental leave would be entitled to the
equivalent of the baby bonus through a new maternity allowance and to
other financial support through the social transfer system. This
recommendation, if accepted, would mean that Australia would have a
hybrid system with improvements on the New Zealand scheme combined with
the backup of the baby bonus for non-eligible parents.
DISCUSSION
New Zealand and Australia have broadly similar job protection
legislation in relation to parental leave but, as in 2008, quite
different systems of income support for parents in the initial months of
an infant's life. The New Zealand scheme, brought in by a
centre-left government, is targeted, based on attachment to the labour
market. The Australian baby bonus scheme, brought in by a centre-fight
government, has been universal. However, Australia's new
centre-left government has introduced targeting based on family income
in order to qualify for the baby bonus.
There are costs and benefits to all three approaches. Being
universal, the current Australian scheme is potentially more expensive
in terms of direct costs, hence the move to targeting. But a universal
scheme is administratively simpler and therefore potentially less costly
than the careful targeting of New Zealand's scheme. New
Zealand's scheme has the potential advantage of theoretically
encouraging the labour market attachment of parents, primarily women.
But the data indicate that most New Zealand women are now strongly
attached to the labour market when work patterns over their entire life
cycle are considered. Career development for increasingly well-educated
women at one extreme, and poverty alleviation at the other extreme, are
strong factors behind these attachments. In addition, other policies,
such as the availability and cost of childcare, influence job
attachment.
The Families Commission proposes further changes that will increase
both the coverage and the length of paid parental leave. In doing so,
the baby bonus was not considered as an option. However, this paper has
raised the question of whether the basic design of paid parental leave
is flawed and suggests that the proposed changes will not address these
inherent weaknesses. As noted, Australia currently has a much simpler
scheme. It involves job protection for those jobs worth protecting and,
before 1 January 2009, a universal payment for all parents. Although
this has resulted in some degree of middle-class capture, which the new
Australian government is trying to address, the current policy provides
real support to those parents who most need it. New Zealand's
scheme also has some elements of middle-class capture, in that those
disqualified from receiving payments, or receiving the lowest absolute
payments, include those most in need. If Australia adopts the
recommendations of the Productivity Commission on paid parental leave,
it will have a scheme with some similarity to New Zealand's scheme.
However, it would be more generous and it would have a backstop of the
baby bonus for non-eligible parents. Thus it would continue to give
support to those who are in need but who are not firmly, or recently,
attached to the labour market.
CONCLUSION
New Zealand's paid parental leave policy was introduced as a
compromise by a coalition government in 2001. Since it was introduced it
has been altered a number of times, including extensions to both length
and eligibility criteria. This has certainly helped broaden its coverage
to include a greater number of families. The Families Commission as well
as the National Advisory Council on the Employment of Women (NACEW) have
suggested further extensions to the eligibility criteria. However, this
incremental approach is problematic because it does not reflect the
dramatic increase in women's employment that have taken place in
recent decades, the changes in the labour market, or advances in our
understanding of the health benefits of a period out of the labour
market after the birth of a child. A more fundamental review of the
design of New Zealand's parental leave policy is required. In
particular, the costs and benefits of a universal payment to new
parents--ideally for at least six months to support breastfeeding--needs
to be investigated.
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Paul Callister (1)
Associate Professor
Institute of Policy Studies
Victoria University of Wellington
Judith Galtry
Paekakariki
(1) Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the referees for their insightful comments.
We are also grateful to Ralph Lattimore of the Australian Productivity
Commission and Natalie Jackson, University of Tasmania, for helpful
discussions about parental leave and the baby bonus in Australia. This
research was supported by funding from the Foundation for Research,
Science and Technology.
(2) This paper focuses on taxpayer-funded paid parental leave. In
both New Zealand and Australia a small but significant number of
employees, particularly in the public sector, are eligible for
employer-funded parental leave schemes. While important, these are not
considered in any detail in this paper.
(3) Paul Callister was the author of the data analysis section of
the Department of Labour's report. However, the surveys were
developed by the Department of Labour and the actual research was
carried out by Research New Zealand. Paul Callister also provided some
minor input into the Families Commission report. Both these reports, as
well as the NACEW report, raise important issues around the eligibility
of men to receive parental leave, but this question is not addressed in
this paper.
(4) The mother or primary caregiver (in the case of adoption) needs
to fill in the application form. The completed form needs to be
accompanied by either a statement and declaration by a chartered
accountant, or a declaration witnessed by a justice of the peace or
other person authorised to hear declarations under the Oaths and
Declarations Act 1957 (see
http://www.ers.govt.nz/parentalleave/self-employed/how-to-apply.html)
(5) Non-standard work is generally seen as not being permanent or
full-time. Included in non-standard work are self-employment, short-term
contracts and casual workers, including seasonal workers.
(6) This did not reflect the then official New Zealand definition
of part-time work, which was less than 20 hours per week, but was in
line with official definitions of part-time work in countries such as
the United States and Sweden.
(7) This survey was carried out at a time of high employment. It is
likely some responses would be different in the face of a weakening
labour market, a real possibility in late 2008.
(8) Smith and Ingram (2005) have endeavoured to "value"
breastfeeding work as an indicator of its economic importance.
(9) Gamlen (2007) argues that policy makers need to take greater
account of New Zealand's very large diaspora when developing social
and economic policy.
(10) The Families Commission also recommends that the length of
paid leave be increased in three steps. Step one would provide six
months' paid leave, step two nine months and step three 12 months.
In each of these periods the leave would be one month longer if
paternity/partner leave is taken consequently.
(11) Simon Chapple, personal communication, January 2008.
(12) http://www.workplace.gov.au/
(13) Discussions with the Australian Productivity Commission in May
2008 suggest that there was some concern about inappropriate expenditure
of the lump sum payment, and that smaller regular payments are likely to
help reduce this abuse.
Table 1 Diverse goals relating to the design of parental leave policy
Policy Some of the issues Possible design of
areas to consider paid parental leave
Health * Mother's wellbeing * Paid leave not
in pregnancy linked to job
* Birth and recovery protection but
* Breastfeeding a universal
* Infant health payment
problems related * Relatively long
to group childcare periods of leave
* No taxpayer support
for out-of-home
childcare in the
first year
of the child's life
Employment * Cost of time out * Paid leave linked
of the workplace to job protection
for parents
* Problems faced * Relatively short
by employers leave periods
with employees
taking leave
* Increasing patterns
of non-standard
work affecting
eligibility
criteria
Gender * Inequality in * Short gender-specific
equity the workplace leave or longer
* Roles of mothers gender-neutral leave
and fathers in * Specific "daddy" leave
the home * Promote leave-taking
* Differing family by fathers
types (same-sex
couples, etc
Supporting * Higher opportunity * High level of
fertility costs associated leave payment
with taking leave * Universal payment
for well-educated
women