Price of parenthood

Published: 7 October 2008 y., Tuesday

Nėštumas
For years parents in the EU have struggled to find good, affordable childcare facilities. In 2002, EU leaders declared childcare a high priority and, to show they meant business, set specific targets. They agreed to make childcare available for at least one third of children under 3 and 90% of children between 3 and school age.

Now, six years later, most countries are still far from reaching those goals, according to a progress report.

The EU report is part of a larger package to help working mums. One proposal would give new mums 18 weeks of paid maternity leave, four more than they are entitled to under existing EU laws.

Another proposal gives self-employed women the right to paid maternity leave through their country’s social security plan. And women who work for a family business, like a farm, would be entitled to social security to help make ends meet if they are widowed or divorced.

Only five EU countries have surpassed the childcare provision target for children under 3 – Portugal, the UK, France, Luxembourg and Slovenia – although a few others are getting close. Eight countries have fulfilled their promise where older children are concerned – Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, Estonia and Italy.

The childcare shortage is a problem both in terms of equal opportunity and economic growth. It’s one reason why birthrates are falling in much of the EU; couples are reluctant to have children for fear they won’t be able to find a nursery school.

With the population greying, the EU desperately needs women to expand the labour pool. But mums often end up leaving their jobs to care for their children. Only 66% of women with dependent children are working, compared with 92% of men.

The pattern is frustrating EU efforts to close the gender gap. Women continue to earn 15% less than men and get fewer top jobs. “Too often, having children costs women their income and their job prospects,” said employment commissioner Vladimir Špidla.

Responsibility for childcare falls to individual countries, but they can get funding from the EU to develop childcare facilities. About €500m is available for 2007-13.


 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Foreign divorces - MEPs to debate fairer rules

Divorcing someone of another nationality can be legal and emotional nightmare. more »

The first international evaluation of Lithuania’s reputation

People from various countries hold quite a favourable opinion about Lithuania’s governance, its activities in the international community, and economic living and working conditions in Lithuania. more »

Movie goers support African village

An African eco-village in South Africa's wine region receives funding from a surprising source. more »

MEP on ways to avert future credit crunch

Teaching children about basic finance so they avoid getting into bad debts at a later age is the aim of a leading MEP. more »

MEPs to vote on EU Blue Card for skilled migrants

The proposed European Blue Card scheme for skilled immigrants will pass a crucial vote in the Civil Liberties Committee on Monday. more »

Talk of the Town: Locklear set up?

Talk of the Town brings you the latest in news, music and celebrity talk. more »

Palin and Princess Diana related

Genealogists from Ancestry.com discovered that Palin and the late princess descended from John Strong and his wife Abigail Ford. more »

EU celebrates UN declaration of human rights with tribute to dissidents.

Tunisian journalist Souhayr Belhassen has campaigned in defence of human rights for more than three decades. more »

Price of parenthood

For years parents in the EU have struggled to find good, affordable childcare facilities. In 2002, EU leaders declared childcare a high priority and, to show they meant business, set specific targets. more »

Pope decries faithless culture

Pope Benedict XVI opens a major Vatican meeting and urges man not to brush God aside by declaring himself master of the world. more »