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See Link at
http://www.oecd.org/document/45/0,3343,en_2649_33729_39699821_1_1_1_1,00.html

Improved childcare policies needed to achieve better work/life balance, says
OECD
- Getting family-friendly policies right will help reduce poverty, promote
child development, enhance equity between men and women and stem the fall in
birth-rates, according to a new OECD report.

Babies and Bosses, Reconciling Work and Family Life  compares the different
approaches that the 30 OECD countries take to help parents balance their work
and family commitments.
http://www.oecd.org/document/45/0,3343,en_2825_498370_39651501_1_1_1_1,00.htm
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Denmark and Iceland have the most effective public policies and workplace
practices that promote a healthy work and family balance, the report finds.
Finland, France, Norway and Sweden also perform well. English-speaking
countries generally do well in some respects, but have high rates of child
poverty, mainly because fewer lone parents work in these countries.  Germany,
Korea, and the Slovak Republic do poorly in most areas covered.

The report analyses tax and benefit policies, parental-leave arrangements,
childcare, out-of-school-hours care, and workplace practices, such as access
to part-time and flexible working hours, across the 30 OECD countries. The
findings are then compared with key indicators, such as the level of child
poverty, the gender pay gap and the birth rate (see Table 1 at link).

While there is no "one-size fits all" policy recipe, the following elements
can contribute to an effective public spending and policy development
strategy:

Giving parents money on condition that one of them is not working but caring
for children sounds sensible but is often counter-productive. It destroys
incentives to work and leads employers to assume that women will stay at
home, so they stop hiring women and stop investing in their careers.

Financial incentives to work are important. Tax/benefit systems should be
designed to give both parents strong financial incentives to work.

Single parents should be obliged to look for work and given the quality
childcare support to ensure that they can. 

Many countries could get better value for money from their spending on
childcare support. Out-of-school-hours care for older children, for example,
is relatively cheap to offer and can make a big impact on the ability of both
parents to work.

Parental leave works best when it is short but well-paid.  To promote gender
equity and greater paternal involvement in child rearing, some part of the
leave should be shared by the parents (rather than as now, when nearly all
leave is taken by mothers).

Workplaces need to be more family-friendly. Part-time working, flexible hours
and the ability to take leave to care for sick children can all make a big
difference to parents seeking to reconcile work and family life. 
 
See a selection of tables and graphs and country notes for selected
countries.



See the previous Babies and Bosses reviews of policies to promote work and
family reconciliation for Australia, Denmark and the Netherlands (Vol. 1);
Austria, Ireland and Japan (Vol. 2); New Zealand, Portugal and Switzerland
(Vol. 3.); and, Canada, Finland, Sweden and the United Kingdom (Vol. 4).

 


Peter Whiteford
Principal Administrator (Welfare Reform)
Social Policy Division
Directorate of Employment, Labour and Social Affairs
OECD
Phone:  33 (0)1 45 24 90 41
Fax:    33 (0)1 45 24 90 98

OECD Social Policy Division via www.oecd.org/els/social