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Valuing Parenthood: Paid Maternity Leave - Interim Options Paper Launch

Sex Discrimination

Paid maternity
leave: Opting for a future

Photo of Pru Goward making a speechValuing
Parenthood: Paid Maternity Leave - Interim Options Paper Launch. Speech
by Pru Goward, Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner, 18 April 2002.

  • Thank you for
    being here today in what I trust will be the beginning of an informed
    and fair-minded public debate about the need or otherwise for a national
    paid maternity leave scheme for Australia.


  • But why today?


  • Why today, why
    not ten years ago, why not wait a bit longer?


  • Because we, along
    with most of the developed world, stand on the edge of a profound challenge
    to the future of human existence- the challenge of who will have our
    children.


  • Every year, slightly
    fewer women of child-bearing age in Australia, as elsewhere, decide
    to have children.


  • A variety of
    economic, biological and social changes have converged to create this
    trend.


  • Today the majority
    of women will have to work part or full time for at least part of their
    parenting years.


  • Education and
    training periods are longer, meaning earning capacity begins later in
    life for most.


  • The cost of living
    is high - housing affordability, Australia-wide, has declined by 29%
    with in the space of a generation.


  • And women continue
    to face workplace disadvantage as a result of their role as the bearers
    of children.


  • As Sex Discrimination
    Commissioner, the workplace discrimination that women face as a result
    of their pregnancy or potential pregnancy is my point of entry on this
    issue.


  • Women receive
    less pay, less opportunity, less financial support in the workplace
    because they bear children. They still only earn 84 cents in the male
    dollar, when comparing average weekly ordinary full time earnings.


  • New mothers with their children at the Valuing Parenthood launchAdding
    casual and part time workers, the majority of whom are women, and the
    disparity is even greater.


  • What is the consequence
    of all of this on family formation?


  • Profound. Young
    people are understandably reluctant to partner until they are sure of
    their economic futures.


  • Young women in
    particular are increasingly reluctant to forego the investment they
    have made by withdrawing from the workforce in order to have children.



  • The average age
    of mothers of first children is now 29.8 years.


  • People wishing
    to have children today are forced to 'family cram'.


  • The biological
    clocks start to tick and there is a scramble for the pram.


  • This is assuming
    there can be - women who haven't borne a child by the age of 35 are
    most unlikely to do so after that age. The ability to conceive and complications
    of pregnancy and birth all start to compound as women enter their thirties.


  • At the same time
    there is still a mortgage to be paid, a cost of living to be met and
    a career to be established. Women have to keep working.


  • This is a social
    paradigm shift that can't be reversed - and the sensible thing is to
    work with it, not against it.


  • This is where
    a national scheme of paid maternity leave comes in.


  • In writing this
    options paper I have consulted widely with employer groups, employee
    groups, unions, Government and academics.


  • The message from
    most is clear - the time has come to introduce a national scheme of
    paid maternity leave in Australia.


  • The government
    may wish to take lead on this and we would all be delighted if they
    advanced this issue.


  • Another clear
    message from those with whom I have consulted is that any national scheme
    of paid maternity leave should not be funded by individual employers.



  • Inevitably, whether
    we introduce a national scheme of paid maternity leave is not up to
    myself or the groups with whom I have consulted, but up to Australia
    as a nation.


  • In making this
    decision there are only two questions we need answer.


  • One, what can
    a paid maternity leave scheme do for us? And two, to what extent do
    existing schemes already cover it?


  • A decision is
    then simple.


  • If we believe
    that a national scheme of paid maternity leave can meet worthwhile aims
    not currently being met by the existing government benefits on offer
    - we introduce paid maternity leave.


  • So what are the
    possible aims of a national paid maternity leave scheme?


  • There are three
    I would like to highlight today:


  • While the birth
    of a child is often a special time for families for women it is also
    a time characterised by colic, croup, cracked nipples, six feeds a day
    and sheer physical exhaustion. Post natal depression is common, as is
    the need for a physical recovery from caesarean section births.


  • The 'family cram'
    means that dragging yourself out of bed after your head has just hit
    the pillow-following feed number five- to go to work is 'that's life'
    for many women with newborn babies.


  • Paid maternity
    leave will allow women the time needed directly after the birth of a
    child to recover physically from childbirth and establish a feeding
    routine without being forced to return to work due to financial necessity.



  • A period of paid
    maternity leave can also play a role in addressing Australia's disturbing
    tendency to a fertility strike - we are literally becoming a society
    without a future generation.


  • The current fertility
    rate is 1.75. This figure sits well below the replacement rate of 2.1.
    Since 1961, when it hit a high of 3.6 children per woman, it has slid
    continuously- a decade ago this rate was 1.9.


  • While I am not
    suggesting that paid maternity leave alone can redress this, a period
    of paid maternity leave will definitely respond to some of the financial
    concerns discouraging women from having babies at all, or having only
    one, or delaying having babies.


  • Paid maternity
    leave means that following the birth of a child there will not be a
    total loss of income by one, or sometimes the only income earner in
    a family.


  • As 'saving for
    a baby' gets added onto the family crammers' list of things to do, the
    provision of payment through a paid maternity leave scheme may mean
    that families are more able to have children at a time when they want
    to, rather than having to delay the decision for money reasons.


  • France and Sweden
    have been much more ambitious. France has introduced paid maternity
    leave as a deliberate attempt to tackle their birth rate drop- France
    for example, got down to 1.7 in the year 2000. But they recognised that
    substantial periods of paid maternity leave must be offered. In France
    it's 16-26 weeks paid maternity leave and in Sweden it is well over
    a year - and social insurance pays.


  • In most countries
    the introduction of paid maternity leave is too recent to test its effect
    on fertility rates, however since introducing paid maternity leave for
    a third child, the streets of Singapore are said to be full of strollers.


  • Arguably a national
    scheme of paid maternity leave may also be able to provide benefits
    for the labour force and foster Australia's economic growth.


  • Every year the
    Australian Government invests public funds into education and training
    programs. In 2000 women made up 46 per cent of all Australians with
    post school qualifications.


  • Women are spending
    years studying and training to enter the workforce - Women are attending
    university, entering TAFE and doing other a variety of other training
    courses. They are qualifying as lawyers, accountants, chefs, beauticians
    and aroma therapists.


  • The majority
    of women are having children between the ages 30-34.


  • It is when women
    have committed at least 10 years to their field, in study and/or experience,
    and are often on their way to becoming leaders in their fields, that
    they leave the workforce.


  • In providing
    women with a paid break from the workforce, paid maternity leave offers
    women the financial support to have more choice in when they have children,
    and as a result, to retain ties with the workforce for many more years.


  • This in turn
    means that Australia has its most skilled labour force in the increasingly
    competitive global market in which it operates.


  • These are just
    some of the aims that paid maternity leave can meet.


  • Are these aims
    important? Are they of national significance?


  • I think they
    are and that anyone would find it hard to disagree.


  • For those who
    don't agree, this is where the debate begins.


  • In deciding what
    type of national scheme of paid maternity leave to introduce, it is
    first worth looking at whether existing government benefits are meeting
    the aims I just outlined.


  • The government
    provides a range of income support payments to families to assist with
    the cost of raising children.


  • Last financial
    year, the Federal government committed over 10 billion dollars to direct
    family assistance, including the maternity allowance, family tax benefits
    A and B and a maternity immunisation allowance.


  • None of these
    existing benefits respond directly to the main aim of a paid maternity
    leave scheme - the need to financially support women in employment at
    the time of childbirth.


  • The Government's
    new First Child Tax Rebate, costing half a billion dollars a year, will
    also not assist that rising number of women who need to go back to work
    in the first year.


  • The lack of direct
    financial support by the Government for women who are in employment
    and have children, suggests suggests to me that the rapidity with which
    the generation jam has descended upon us has not been picked up in Canberra.
    That is easy to change.


  • With 70 per cent
    of women in their child bearing years participating in the labour force,
    providing financial support to working women having babies is a matter
    of national significance.


  • We have a choice.



  • We either support
    women today in their dual role as integral members of the workforce
    and as the bearers of children, or we don't - we tell them to go home-
    or we support all groups of women, whatever combination of work and
    family they choose.


  • If we want them
    to go home it makes more sense to stop them from being in the workforce
    altogether… at least once they are married. We could re-enact the
    marriage bar.


  • No, marriage
    is too late. Let's take women out of university... and school, and then
    I suppose, it's hardly possible to justify reading and writing…



  • We'll tell young
    girls today, there's a nice spot for you in the home.
    Barefoot, pregnant and in the kitchen.


  • Or, we support
    women and men so that they can manage a combination of work and family
    responsibilities. Paid maternity leave is part of doing that. Just ask
    the rest of the world.

Next Steps

  • I have asked for
    submissions by 12 July 2002, which is in 12 weeks time. This is a reasonably
    generous amount of time in order to allow people time to discuss the
    issues, develop their positions and prepare submissions.


  • These submissions
    will form the basis of the final paper. As such it is important that
    we receive submissions from as wide a range of stakeholders as possible
    to ensure that all views are represented. I hope that all of you in
    this room will be making submissions, and that you will encourage your
    colleagues and members to do likewise.


  • I will also be
    continuing with my direct consultations. I intend to travel to each
    capital city in order to speak to individuals and organisations representing
    employers, employees, women and the community. I also hope to continue
    the very constructive dialogue that I have been having with a range
    of Commonwealth government departments.


  • The final paper
    will be released later this year, which will include recommendations
    to Government. The quality and content of the final paper will be very
    much dependent on the feedback and input I receive in response to this
    Interim paper.

 

Last
updated 18 April 2002