It sounds good: six extra weeks and at replacement salary, not the minimum wage. But it’s not as good as it sounds. For a start, it entrenches sex discrimination as it doesn’t replace the carer’s pay unless they are the mother. This means it is not a real workplace payment and will do nothing to shift the current gender imbalance of parenting by encouraging more sharing of roles.
So the father gets two weeks on his pay but if he wants more, will usually drop to a lower pay rate. Legislating for this presumably would breach the Sex Discrimination Act and suggests the Coalition makes no commitment to closing the gaps between male and female wages. A lot of guff about mother child bonding as an excuse for saving money adds insult to injury.
There are other questions about it being a workplace entitlement is reinforced because the money will be administered by the government’s Family Assistant Office to reduce pressure on employers. This exacerbates the problem with the ALP scheme because it is, and will be seen as, a government payment and if the Coalition’s payment will not even be administered by employers it will not be seen by them as a workplace entitlement. It will also, presumably, replace existing workplace entitlements for up to six months’ paid leave and may reduce the connections.
One of the basic arguments for paid parental leave was to normalise the relationship between parenting and paid work. If the payment is not integrated into the normal workplace processes, it is still a “welfare” payment, even if it replaces pay. It is also not a leave payment in either scheme because eligibility for the payment carries no actual leave entitlement. If the worker has not had 12 months continuous service with the same employer, they will not have any parental leave entitlement, and would therefore be dependent on the goodwill of their employer. This workplace mobility is predicted to mean that one in five new mothers will not be eligible for leave to match the payment.
And then there are questions on whether it will even happen. By delaying the start until 2012, there is time to find reasons for not introducing it. The costs are high and it is big business that doesn’t like the extras levy. It also offends many within the Liberal and National Parties who want more for “traditional families”. The other scheme will be there, so delay would be easy.
Parental leave is a flagship for the message that Tony Abbott really has changed his views on women but there is little other evidence for a serious shift in his policies. Stating his credentials through daughters and wife, without any serious political commitments to areas such as equal pay or other gender gap changes is a fairly fragile basis for attracting women voters and not really very credible.
Some people will never be happy with anything. Whatever this correspondent has written about the Liberal’s scheme, it has to be far better for families than that “minimum wage” nonsense that Julia is locked in to for a much shorter period.
How about a critique on that too Eva…!
@Eva,
Tony may change his POLICIES on women, but he can’t pretend to have changed his VIEWS – his views are a product of his upbringing, and are very well known. Even in the middle of an election campaign he can’t refrain from making stupid sexist comments.
And how much credibility should we give him anyway? He was originally completely opposed to any PPL. Could we believe him then?
Then he proposed a PPL scheme (because the government had one). Could we believe him then?
Then he changed his proposed scheme. Could we believe him then?
Now he is apparently asking us to believe he won’t change his mind again if he were to be elected.
When the levy runs out, which it will because of costs blowout, when eveyone takes it up, the tax payer will be footing the bill. A person earing $2000pw doesn’t need help to save for their baby, if there company doesn’t already have a maternity scheme.
I bet this policy doesn’t see the light of day, a non-core Howard Lite policy.
Tony Abbott could be handing out free gold bars to women, and Eva Cox would still hate him and the Liberal Party.
Cox’s a Fabian Socialist who uses the trojan horse of feminist academia to push her Left-wing barrow.
The Coalition’s policy is a wonderful, generous scheme aimed at some of the most vulnerable people in our society: mothers and babies. Let’s all get behind this scheme and give it the support it deserves.