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CALL FOR EVIDENCE PARENTIAL AND PATERNITY LEAVE

02/01/2025

EQUALITY AT WORK: GB CALL FOR EVIDENCE ON STATUTORY PATERNITY & SHARED PARENTAL LEAVE

2024 was a significant year for employment law, with a strong focus on reform of rights in the workplace. One of the areas currently under review in Great Britain is statutory paternity and shared parental leave.

Background and Context

On 6 December 2024, the GB Women & Equalities Commission launched a call for evidence to inform their work ahead of the GB Government’s proposed review of the parental leave system.

This move comes in response to the recognition that the current system does not adequately support working parents. The GB draft Employment Rights Bill published in October 2024 includes measures to enhance family-friendly rights at work, but states that a comprehensive review is necessary to create a more effective and equitable system.

Northern Ireland (NI) is currently working on implementing an effective Early Learning and Childcare Strategy, which is considered a critical driver of gender equality. Recent reforms to parental leave proposed in the NI Good Jobs Consultation  only tweak at the existing regime, addressing some of its current inefficiencies. These changes would more or less align NI to the current position in GB.

In Great Britain the review is much more far reaching.

The Call for Evidence

The Call for Evidence is the first stage of this review. The Committee has highlighted that the unequal division of childcare responsibilities is a key driver of wider gender inequality and the gender pay gap. The goal is to identify the most effective ways to encourage equal sharing of childcare and domestic responsibilities between mothers and their partners.

Employers are encouraged to share their experiences and views, especially on how inequalities in the uptake of shared parental leave by ethnicity, income, qualification level, and occupational status can be addressed.

Questions

The Committee is seeking written submissions on the following points:

  1. What have been the longer-term equality impacts of the scheme, for example on equal sharing of responsibilities for children as they grow up, and wider domestic responsibilities?
  2. What have been the labour market impacts of the scheme, particularly for women?
  3. Why has take up of statutory shared parental leave been low and what could be done to increase take up?
  4. How can inequalities in take up of shared parental leave, including by ethnicity, income, qualification level and occupational status, be addressed?
  5. Are there potentially more effective alternatives to the current “maternal transfer” model of shared parental leave?
  6. Which countries have most effectively incentivised equal parenting and wider gender equality through their approaches to parental leave? What would be the costs and benefits of replicating?

Timeline for Submissions

Employers and other stakeholders are invited to submit their written evidence by Friday, 31 January 2025. These insights and experiences will then help role shape what is hoped to be a more equitable parental leave system.