… this speech at a ministerial conference on the European Child Guarantee, organised by the French presidency of the EU … do they make? How do current laws enable them to take care of children raised in a family while leading fulfilling … earnings for women, which increases with the birth of each child, shows the impact of this unpaid care work on women’s …
… Europe is an ageing continent and women are often taking care of their parents, as well as children. Our data shows … pay gap actually widens the older women get, with having a child and getting married both having a negative impact on … where women are concentrated in poorly paid fields like care work, while men dominate highly paid fields like ICT, is …
… to integrate into its rules of governance the 2012 Family Care Leave Act ( Familienpflegezeitgesetz , FPfZG), and the … attractive for women at the same time. Trends show that care for elderly and sick family members and children is … paid duties to care for a disabled adult relative or small child. In 2015, Germany introduced Parental Allowance Plus, …
… children have a job. With the arrival of each additional child, the economic independence of women shrinks. The need to care for children, parents or sick and disabled relatives …
… the hours that they work in order to provide informal care. One third of women who curtail their employment in … work therefore a compromise must still be made between childcare and a successful career. Reconciliation Policies … off work by an expectant mother to cover the birth of her child, and this may be with pay. The leave period commences …
… new parents through to career coaching. Their emergency child and elder care support services makes Nomura an industry leader for holistic back-up care. The programme has been running for over six months. It …
… parental leave, in addition to two weeks leave after a child is born, brought home from hospital, or adopted. One of … leave with full pay following the birth or adoption of a child. "We believe that an employee who has taken up the … men) taking longer than two weeks in connection with a child being born or brought into the home (up to nine weeks …