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Paternity leave
Posted: Fri May 29, 2015 11:13 pm
by Gob
The Swedish government is preparing to give new fathers a third month of paid paternity leave as part of a deal which sees new parents offered up to 16 months off work.
Under the new proposals, fathers would be offered 90 days paid time off as part of a 'use it or lose it' deal, which means it cannot be transferred to mothers. The plans are aimed at encouraging men to spend more time at home with their newborns after statistics revealed that 75 per cent of parental leave is still taken by mothers.
In total, parents in Sweden are offered 480 days of paid leave. They can earn a maximum of £75 per day for the first 390 days, then around £15 for the final 90 days. Ten months of the allowance can be split between either parent, even down to the hour, but three months has to be taken by the mother or it will be lost.
The new law would make that the same for fathers, who currently have an allowance of two months of 'use it or lose it' time. According to The Local, social security minister Annika Strandhäll told Swedish Radio that the third month 'is something we've really looked forward to. We know that this is a key issue towards attaining greater (gender) equality.'
Swedish men were first granted a dedicated month of leave in 1995, with a second added in 2002, and legislators now expect the third to be added in the autumn. According to the World Economic Forum, Sweden ranks fourth in the world in terms of gender equality, behind fellow northern European countries Iceland, Finland and Norway.
Re: Paternity leave
Posted: Fri May 29, 2015 11:48 pm
by Joe Guy
That's no surprise.
Swedes are sissies...

Re: Paternity leave
Posted: Sat May 30, 2015 1:53 pm
by Guinevere
Ha! Not in my experience with Swedes. Any man that can put up with me is no sissy.
I'm sure *none* of you would argue that point

Re: Paternity leave
Posted: Sat May 30, 2015 2:12 pm
by rubato
Gob wrote:The Swedish government is preparing to give new fathers a third month of paid paternity leave as part of a deal which sees new parents offered up to 16 months off work.
Under the new proposals, fathers would be offered 90 days paid time off as part of a 'use it or lose it' deal, which means it cannot be transferred to mothers. The plans are aimed at encouraging men to spend more time at home with their newborns after statistics revealed that 75 per cent of parental leave is still taken by mothers.
In total, parents in Sweden are offered 480 days of paid leave. They can earn a maximum of £75 per day for the first 390 days, then around £15 for the final 90 days. Ten months of the allowance can be split between either parent, even down to the hour, but three months has to be taken by the mother or it will be lost.
The new law would make that the same for fathers, who currently have an allowance of two months of 'use it or lose it' time. According to The Local, social security minister Annika Strandhäll told Swedish Radio that the third month 'is something we've really looked forward to. We know that this is a key issue towards attaining greater (gender) equality.'
Swedish men were first granted a dedicated month of leave in 1995, with a second added in 2002, and legislators now expect the third to be added in the autumn. According to the World Economic Forum, Sweden ranks fourth in the world in terms of gender equality, behind fellow northern European countries Iceland, Finland and Norway.
A policy of a country who actually value families as opposed to empty rhetorical "family values". You can tell what people's values are by what they (actually) sacrifice for.
As Bertrand Russell said (paraphr) "It is possible to determine in principle the exact level of civilization by the amount people are willing to sacrifice in the present on behalf of the future."
(Just as you can determine what, if any, religious values an individual has by seeing how their behavior is changed.)
yrs,
rubato