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 Reconciliation of work and family in the EU

The reconciliation of work, private and family life is a key area for European employment policy, which aims to increase the participation of both men and women in the labour market and to encourage initiatives to support the health and well-being of employees. This survey data report examines employment rates for men and women, the impact of children on labour marketparticipation, the various forms of flexibility to support the reconciliation of work and family life(part-time work, flexibility of working time, work organisation and place of work) and the satisfaction of individuals with their work–life balance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flexibility in the organisation and length of working time, which enables greater reconciliation ofwork, private and family life, can play an important role in increasing employment rates, particularly among women, who retain the bulk of the responsibility for child and dependant care. This, however, is a complicated policy issue. According to the 2009 report on the reconciliation of work, private and family life in the EU (13Mb PDF) from the European Commission, the presence of children (especially younger ones) can have a strong influence on the type of job sought, in particular among women. Flexible working time arrangements, part-time jobs or temporary work are examples of employment that those with parental responsibilities may seek or be ‘pushed into’, often as a result of insufficient, inappropriate or unaffordable childcare provisions. Public policies regarding reconciliation between parenthood and labour market participation have sometimes developed in contradictory ways, combining measures encouraging parents to stay at home with those encouraging them to take up paid employment. Although female employment rates have increased strongly over the past decade, women (and also to some extent men) still encounter difficulties in reconciling work and private and family life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Although significant changes have been made to the labour market over the past 50 years and the labour market participation of women has increased substantially, the Commission report points out that women’s participation in the workforce continues to be affected by their predominant role in the care of children. The presence and number of children, as well as the age of the youngest child, can have a marked influence on female employment rates. The presence of children decreases labour market participation in virtually all EU Member States, while the presence of children usually has the effect of increasing male labour market participation. The average negative effect onfemale participation is -11.3% in EU27 and -10.9% in EU15. For men, the average positive effect is 7.7% in EU27 and 8.8% in EU15.

Much of the difficulty in reconciling work with childcare comes from the high cost of childcare, which has a greater impact where there are two or more children. While women with a single child can succeed in combining motherhood and work with some organisational restructuring, this becomes increasingly difficult with two or more children. This means that women, particularly those in relatively low-paid jobs, prefer to undertake the childcare themselves and withdraw from the labour market. Some of the main ways in which individuals try to reconcile work and family and private lifeinclude:
• part-time working;
• working flexibility;
• flexibility in the organisation of work, including the length of the working day and taking time
off as and when needed;
• flexibility in the place of work, largely through teleworking from home.

Part-time work is widespread among the female workforce, although a proportion of men also work part-time. According to the most recent data from Eurostat, 18.8% of the EU27 workforce worked part-time in 2009. For men the total was 8.3% and for women it was 31.5%. The Netherlands stands out as having the largest proportion of part-time workers among the female workforce (75.8%), due to a long-standing tradition of encouraging part-time working. In addition to differences between men and women in the incidence of part-time working, the reasons why men and women work part-time also differ considerably. In the case of women, the main reason is the care of children and incapacitated adults, accounting for 42% of female parttimework in 2006 (Figure 3); this reason accounted for only 8% of male part-time workers . For men, the main reason for working part-time was the lack of a full-time job. The 2012 Commission report on the reconciliation of work, private and family life in the EU  notes that it is not clear whether part-timers would prefer to work full-time if childcare services were more extensive or if full-time working hours were organised to be more family friendly. ‘Looking after children’ was a reason often cited by women in the Netherlands and the UK, but this could either be due to insufficient childcare facilities or to a deliberate choice of the mothers.

There are many different types of flexible working schemes and arrangements on offer to workers to help them to reconcile work and private and family life. These cover issues such as flexibility in the organisation of working time (including working atypical hours) and flexibility in the length of working time.
The main forms of flexible work organisation are:
• part-time work;
• reduced hours, which allow people to trade income for time off;
• term-time contracts, which allow employees to remain on a permanent contract as either fullor
part-time employees, but gives them the right to unpaid leave during school holidays;
• compressed working week, where weekly hours are compressed into fewer days than normal,
for example a four-day week, giving employees longer weekends;
• flexitime, which allows employees to vary their working hours within specified limits (core
hours) from day to day;
• shift swapping, which allows employees to rearrange shifts among themselves to suit their
needs;
• self-rostering, where employees schedule their own working day to meet the requirements of
service delivery or production (often as a team with a mix of skills, accommodating
individual preferences as much as possible);
• staggered hours, where employees have different start, finish and break times (often in large
workplaces to cover longer working days).
This type of flexibility can have benefits for both the employer and the employee. For theemployer, they can help to reduce employee turnover, increase productivity and reduce operating costs; for the employee, they can help to reconcile work, private and family life. Using data from the Establishment Survey on Working Time and Work–Life Balance  gives an indication of the impact of flexible types of working time arrangements offered by employers. It shows that the main impact was higher job satisfaction (cited by 73% of employee representatives and 61% of managers). A better adaptation of workload was also cited by a majority of both employee representatives and managers (67% and 54%, respectively), and lower absence rates were cited by 31% of employee representatives and 27% of managers. Among the negative impacts, communication problems were cited by 20% of employee representatives and 10% of managers, and increased costs by 6% of employee representatives and 5% of managers. There are a lot of aspect of this process.

 

 

The EU labour market has changed considerably over the past few decades, moving towards more flexibility both in terms of working time and work organisation. In addition, female participation rates have increased sharply, though they are not as high as male participation rates and tend to fall where women have childcare or other types of caring responsibilities. This makes the labour market of today a very different world to that of 50 years ago. The reconciliation of work, family and private life is a core issue for EU employment and health and well-being policy. Helping workers to achieve a better work–life balance and to balance the demands of a job with caring responsibilities will help to increase labour market participation rates for all workers (particularly for women) in line with EU employment policy targets. Part-time working is a major component of this and this option is taken up by a great many women as a way of combining work with caring responsibilities. From the available data, it would seem that part-time working is often not a voluntary option for men, as many state that the reason for their part-time work is a lack of full-time work. There is also an array of working time flexibility options on offer from employers including time banking schemes, and work organisation flexibility. These can work well provided they are well managed. Similarly, remote working and teleworking options, usually involving working from home, can add a significant element of flexibility to work in terms of reducing commuting time and allowing employees to be more flexible about when they work. This type of flexibility has grown in recent years and is likely to increase further in the future due to technological advances and the attraction of cost savings on office space for employers. However, this type of flexibility also needs to be well-managed and demands high levels of trust and communication if it is to work well. Reconciliation of work, family and private life is set to be an ongoing challenge for EU employment policy. In addition to the likely increasing responsibility for care that will take place as a result of the ageing EU population, individuals are beginning to expect more flexibility and work–life balance in their lives in general, in contrast to previous working generations. These trends will ensure that work–life balance issues remain a high-profile topic over the coming years.
 

 

 

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