The growth of female labour force participation and the subsequent consolidation of their position at work has been the most striking change in the labour market over the past 50 years and this increase in labour force participation is occurring in both developing and industrialised societies. It will appear that women have nonetheless emerged in a stronger labour market position, vis-à-vis men, than ever before.
Women represent more than half of the world’s population and their representation is swiftly increasing. At the same time the experiences of women in organizations are very different from those of men.
The labour market is undergoing considerable
change. The advancement of new technology, the enterprise culture and the
development of positive action training for women, policies that have been
enacted and other vices have all begun to change the pattern of gender
segregation in the workplace.
However, much of the
examination of the advancement of women in the labour market has been couched
in terms of their progress relative to males, largely because their experience
at work has been at a disadvantage. This reality has been manifested in such
outcomes as occupational segregation into lower paying jobs and unequal access
within organizations.
Throughout their working lives, women continue to face significant obstacles in gaining access to decent work. Women still earn a lot less than men despite decades of equal-pay laws. Even in many of those countries where gaps in labour force participation and employment have narrowed and where women are shifting away from contributing family work and moving to the services sector, the quality of women’s jobs remains a matter of concern.
Looking at how women have
fared so far in work representation, I’ll be critically assessing the women in
the UK and Sweden and look at factors that have generally affected women’s work
representation such as; the gender pay gap, shared parental leave, policies,
women’s segregated jobs, child care and how it affects women’s career in terms
of progression.
Looking at the UK over
the past 40years, there has been a rise in the percentage of women aged 16 to
64 in employment and a fall in the percentage of men. In April to June 2013
around 67percent of women aged 16-64 were in work, an increase from 53percent
in 1971. For men the percentage fell to 76percent in 2013 from 92percent in
1971. (office for National statistics 2013)
Women’s labour market
participation has increased, although not as yet to equal men. The overall
gender pay gap has narrowed but remains substantive and above the OECD average
notwithstanding a relatively high rate of women employment in the UK. Women
predominate among the low paid whose ranks have increased markedly since the
1980s. (Lansley and Reed, 2013)
Sweden has been described
as one of the most equal countries in the world and one of the most gender
segregated labour markets. It is true that Sweden has the highest rate of women’s
participation in the work force. However, men and women end up in different
sectors and jobs. Sweden is in many ways a country where there is gender
equality. About 80percent of all women in Sweden aged 20 to 64 works outside of
the home, which is a high proportion compared to many other countries. However, gender inequality still exists
in its labour market. Women who work in the same professions as men usually
have lower wages, despite doing the same job as men. There are fewer women than
men in the senior management of companies. Research also shows that there are
differences between the opportunities men and women have to combine work with
family life. Women do the majority of housework, even if they work just as much
as men. More women than men take parental leave for longer periods
(informationsverige.se 2017).
However, they are a lot
of key factors among women’s employment some of which includes:
In the UK, Gender pay gap
takes a centre stage in women’s work representation. In this day and age, it
seems shocking that women are still paid relatively less than men. Inequality
starts at a young age. A UK survey by Halifax shows that boys get 13percent
more pocket money than girls. Today the average working woman in the OECD still
earns 16percent less than her male counterpart despite becoming better
qualified. Job segregation between men and women both across industries and
occupations is a major factor explaining the UK pay gap and regional variations
in the pay gap. The gender pay gap in the UK remains significant with female
workers earning on average 17percent less than men. Evidence suggest that the
two key factors that explains the gender pay gap in the UK are differences in work life patterns between
men and women. Many women spend more time out of the workforce than men to
have children or care for their family either via career breaks or by working
part time or fewer hours. Spending time out of work means that they miss out on
pay progression (Connolly and Gregory, 2008). A study by the IFS (2016) shows
that the gender pay gap tends to widen after the arrival of children, which
coincides with career breaks. Olsen and Walby (2006) showed that differences in
work life patterns explain more than a third of the gender pay gap. The need to
work part time or flexibly means that women are often forced into lower paying
sectors or occupations that can accommodate these preferences. Even those who
are willing to return to work on a full-time basis face the challenge of
overcoming biases against the ‘’CV gap’’ which makes it difficult for them to
return to highly competitive senior roles. (PwC, 2017)
Also, the second factor is the incidence of occupational segregation.
labour market rigidities such as occupational segregation is an important
driver of the pay gap. Olsen and Walby (2006) show that this factor explains
18percent of the pay gap in the UK. Segregation occurs when women cluster in
sectors that tend to be lower paying, for example in social care or education.
Even within sectors women are more likely to take up roles such as
administrative roles rather than senior or managerial roles. The reasons for
this are complex. Part of this is due to social and cultural factors that
children adopt from a young age which influence their perspective on suitable
occupations for women. These perceptions are changing as more women enter
traditionally male dominated sectors. However, this has yet to translate fully
into labour market outcomes.
As part of a push to
narrow Britain’s persistent pay gap, legislation now requires public and
private companies with more than 250 employees to publish the average hourly
pay difference between male and female. The regulations, which were introduced
in the Equality Act 2010, offer an opportunity for businesses to benchmark
their pay structures against others and to analyse them in detail, perhaps for
the first time. Equal pay law in the UK already demands that employers pay men
and women the same for the same job. (PwC, 2017)
While in Sweden, men’s wages are still higher than women in Sweden. But the gender wage gap is decreasing, and over the past decade the gap has decreased by 3.1 percentage points, reaching a record low of 13.2 percent. Around one third of the decrease is due to rises in pay and the rest to the altered composition of the workforce. When weighing in factors such as education, age, profession, sector and hours of work, the pay gap between men and women is 5percent (2015). Work in sectors dominated by women is generally valued less and these sectors have lower wage levels than ones dominated by men. (Gustafsson, 2015)
In 2011, Swedish women earned 14% less than men, a pay gap just below
the OECD average (15%). Lower pay not only deprives women of higher earnings in
the short term but it also exposes them to high poverty risk after retirement.
Women’s average monthly salaries in Sweden are less than 87% of men’s
95% when differences in choice of profession and sector are taken into account.
Pay differences are most obvious in the country councils, and the smallest
difference is found among blue-collar workers. The pay gap between men and
women can partly be explained by differences in profession, sector, position,
work experience and age. (Sverige, 2017)
One reason for Sweden’s gender pay gap being relatively high is the
segregated nature of the labour market. A large proportion of women work in the
public sector, where pay is low. However, with new Swedish policies in place,
businesses with 25 or more employees have to establish an equality action plan.
And companies with big pay gaps face fines if they fail to take steps to close
them. The Swedish gender pay gap has become smaller since this system was
introduced, but it is still 15percent.
McQuaid and Lindsey
(2005) observed that the organisation of work and the practicalities of
combining career and motherhood are significant contributory factors to women’s
relative poor performance. Although they were unable to establish the degree of
impact, they did note that motherhood directly affected the type of roles women
can take, prefer or are offered. Waldfogel (2007) described this as detrimental
and termed it the “the penalties of motherhood” in terms of their career
progression. She noted the difference in men’s career which suffers no
disadvantage because family and marriage produce limited or no career
interruptions for them. She argued that this penalty may last after the woman
has ceased to have childcare responsibility, indeed for their entire career,
due to the negative career effects of break forming a “negative shadow” on
their future careers. McQuaid et al. (2009) observed that flexible employment,
in terms of hours or part-time work were appealing due to the relatively
straightforward entry/exit/re-entry procedures as they enabled women to combine
work and family responsibilities more easily, but at a cost to their long-term
career. They argued that these constraints frequently forced women to take less
“attractive” employments which accommodate personal circumstances on reduced
salaries and hours of work or both. (Bryan McIntosh, 2012)
There is a tension
between motherhood and employment. The impact of motherhood in relations to
women’s career is still underestimated. Motherhood directly affects career
progression. It results in the devaluation of women’s abilities, a denial of
opportunity and a penalisation in in respect to careers. Women’s career
progression is defined by motherhood, dependent children, working hours, and
career breaks. Career break define career progression Davey et al. (2005) view
that women who take a career break are disadvantaged in terms of progression.
However, the axis of this disadvantage is the cumulative length of the break.
Women who take a career break of greater than two years see their careers
detrimentally restricted. Also, there is a tangible career penalty for women
which does not exist for men. This penalty is pronounced within women with
dependent children. As dependent
children are still primarily cared for and nurtured by women the exchange
between this and careers ultimately makes this issue a matter of motherhood. (Bryan McIntosh R. M., 2012)
The gender gap in incomes
has narrowed in recent years but it has not disappeared and one of the possible
reasons the gap has not closed is that women’s responsibility to care for
children continues to hinder their employment. According to Ghazalat Azmat
(march 2015) the presence of young children has a major effect in reducing
female participation in work. Women with children are also likely to work in
part time jobs, which suffer a pay penalty. (Azmat, 2015)
According to a survey by
Mumsnet (2013), it showed that three quarters of British mothers feel that
having children made it more difficult to progress in their career, and nearly
two in threes said that they felt less employable after having children.
However, I think the main problem is that a lot of people have strong
assumptions around women, raising a family and traditional role models. These
assumptions are strongly influenced by society, organisational culture and
individual experience and they shape behaviour. Women will only be competitive
in the workplace if they have good quality reliable child care in place and if
employers and colleagues recognise the need to set predictable working hours
that allow for school runs. More than 60% of survey respondents said they felt
their boss had a negative perception of working mothers, which meant they were
mistreated when they returned to work, and overlooked for career opportunities.
Women often found themselves being offered less senior roles (18%), overlooked
for promotion or opportunities (27%), and even demoted (8%) on returning to the
workforce. (lewis, 2014)
According to Victoria
Northbrooke (August 2015) Flexible childcare that matches parents increasingly
unpredictable schedule is still a distant for the UK government. Many parents
have taken extreme measures to find childcare during school holidays. While
some parents are being forced to send their children to grandparents hundreds
of miles away while others have borrowed money just to cover the rising costs
of care. A study from the Family and childcare trust carried out in (2014)
found that a fifth of parents resort to calling in sick over the summer
holidays in order to care for their children and 12 percent give up work
entirely because they simply can’t find suitable childcare in the holidays.
In Sweden, which is renowned for its flexible
and progressive childcare programmes, most public nurseries offer care from 6am
to 6pm with recently increased provision to include overnight and weekend
childcare services. While in the UK only 53percent of schools have ‘before and
after’ school clubs during term time and only 20 percent offer holiday
childcare (family and childcare Trust report 2015). With private provision of
holiday childcare places costing from £150 per week per child, many parents are
really feeling the financial strain. Neither do the number and quality of local
childminders meet demand.
Affordable childcare is
crucial to Britain’s economy but it is also the lack of flexible care that is a
primary barrier to women returning to the workplace and their career. Britain
has one of the most expensive childcare in the world. A report by Family and
Childcare Trust showed that British parents are handing over more than £7,500 a
year for childcare for two children, around 4.7 percent more than the average
mortgage bill. One in three mothers say they have been put off having another
child by the cost of childcare, while 77 percent of parents say they would
chose to work less and spend more time with their children if the childcare in
the UK was more affordable.
Sweden has the most
generous childcare benefits in the world. They have long had a glowing reputation
for its generous childcare facilities and is regularly ranked as one of the
best places to raise a family. In Sweden each child is guaranteed a place at a
public preschool and no parent is charged more than three percent of their
salary SEK 1260(£132) a month for the country’s highest earners. All other
costs are covered by the state. Most public nurseries offer care from around
06:00 to 18:00 but with the numbers of parents working flexible or
unconventional hours going up, local councils are increasingly providing
overnight and weekend services. Just over 78percent of mothers with children
under seven went out to work in 2012, according to Statistics-Sweden’s labour
force survey (2012). (Savage, 2013).
A family policy that
supports working parents with the same rights and obligations for both men and
women makes it easier for parents in Sweden to find a decent work life balance.
Child care is guaranteed to all parents and the aim is that nursery school and
pre-school should be affordable for all. Fees are proportional to the parent’s
income and the more children you have the less you pay per child. For children
between three and six, childcare is even free for up to 15 hours per week. The
Swedish government also provides an additional monthly child allowance until
the age of 16 of SEK 1,050 per month per child and if you have more than one
child you get an extra family supplement. (source: Sweden and Gender Equality
November 2017)
Women who return to work
following a career break to take care for their families often face a
motherhood penalty which is a systematic difference in pay for working mothers
in comparison to women without children. One way of addressing this is by
introducing policies which allows parents to share the burden of childcare. It
has been a longstanding problem concerning discrimination in the labour market
because of women childbearing responsibilities. Women have been looked upon as
not reliable because of their potentials to off work for maternity leave or
parental responsibilities. On the other hand, there has been a lot of
criticisms on the fact that fathers are limited by legislation in terms of what
they can do in a family situation. Furthermore, parental responsibility has
always been looked upon as the duty of the woman from time immemorial while
fathers were seen as breadwinners of the family. In an effort to give the
mothers the opportunity to continue with their career without the child bearing
stigma, the government made provision on shared parental leave which came into
force on the 5th of April,2015. (Ndzi, 2017)
The UK government
introduced Shared parental leave in April 2015 to try to improve gender
equality in the workplace. The policy allows both new parents to share up to
50weeks of leave and 37weeks of statutory pay after their baby arrives. Eligible
employees with babies due or who plan to adopt a child or intended parents in
surrogacy who meet certain criteria, will be able to take advantage of the new
shared parental leave rights. They may also choose how they will share the
statutory leave period and the statutory pay between themselves and their
spouses/partners/civil partners. In birth cases, all mothers will still be
required to take two weeks of compulsory maternity leave after their child’s
birth and may request to start Shared Parental leave from the beginning of the
third week after childbirth. Assuming a mother has not chosen to start her
maternity leave early, she and the baby’s father (or her partner) will then be
entitled to share the remaining 50 weeks of shared parental leave and 37 weeks
of statutory pay. In all non-birth scenarios, eligible employees are able to
share the full 52 weeks of shared parental leave and 39 weeks of statutory pay.
Employees will be permitted to take SPL in either one continuous block or,
provided their employer agrees, as a series of separate leave periods.
Therefore, couples could decide to take their leaves at the same time and
effectively split the SPL and statutory pay evenly between each partner.
Alternatively, one of the employees could request a continuous block of leave,
with the other employee requesting shorter blocks of leave throughout their
partner’s block of leave. Employees may also request short blocks of leave and
take these blocks separately, interchanging their childcare
responsibilities. (Lewis, 2014)
However, it has had a
slow start. A recent survey of 1,000 human resources workers by the CIPD, the
professional body for HR, suggests that only about 5percent of new fathers have
opted for shared leave since its introduction. It is being said that from April
2018, employers will also have to publish detailed information about gender pay
imbalances in their workforce. They will have to release both their mean and
median gender pay gap for salaries and bonuses, as well as the number of men
and women in each salary quartile. (Sarah O’Connor, 2017).
It was the government’s
intention that the introduction of shared parental leave and pay in 2015 would
help encourage more working fathers to take more time off after the birth of a
child and in turn encourage working mothers to return to work. However, the
working families study showed that 25% of fathers are unaware that they can
take shared parental leave and survey statistics from my family care and the
women’s business council show that take up of shared parental leave is
approximately 1% with 40% of companies reporting that not a single father has
taken shared parental leave since the regime was introduced. (Smith, 2017)
Sweden is really winning the equality race with its laws and attitude towards parenting. Currently in Sweden, parents are given 16 months when a new child is born to share as they choose (although 60 days are given to each parent, and cannot be transferred. This was raised to 90 days in 2016, which as a father, you either take fully or lose. This leave can be taken as hours, days, weeks or months over a period of eight years per child. And 390 of these days are paid at 80% of the parent’s average wage, with a cap for the highest earners. In Sweden there’s something they call ‘Latte papas’ they are vast dressed men who congregate in coffee bars with their babies on a weekday and it is becoming the most globally recognised symbol of Sweden’s generous paternity laws.
Childcare is subsidised by the state, and is capped at 3% of a family’s
income. On average, for each child, families rarely pay more than £113 a month.
Nurseries are open all day and night to allow for shift work. (Lucy
foster, 2017).
However, Albrecht et al. (2003) hypothesised that the generous parental
leave was a major factor contributing to the glass ceiling in Sweden. Employers understand that the Swedish
parental leave system gives women a strong incentive to participate in the
labour force but also encourages them to take long periods of parental leave
and to be less flexible with respect to hours once they return to work.
Extended absence and lack of flexibility are particularly costly for employers
when employees hold top jobs. Employers therefore place relatively few women in
fast track career positions. Women, even those who would otherwise be strongly
career-oriented, understand that their promotion possibilities are limited by
employer beliefs and respond rationally by opting for more family-friendly
career paths and by fully utilizing their parental leave benefits. Women may
choose family friendly jobs but choice reflects both preferences and
constraints. The argument is that what is different about Sweden is the
constraints that women face and that these constraints in the form of employer expectation
are driven in part by the generosity of the parental leave system (James Albrecht, 2014)
Although Sweden is often seen as paragons of gender equality, many women
and men are finding it increasingly difficult to strike a balance between their
dual loyalties vis-à-vis work and family (Cousins and Tang, 2004; Kitterod and
Pwtterson, 2006; Knudsen 2009). Since the 1970s the Swedish welfare state has
promoted an agenda of double emancipation, encouraging a combination of female
labour market participation and active fatherhood (Klinth, 2002) as a means of
challenging gendered assumptions over role allocation. Despite this supportive
regulatory environment, research shows parenthood generally affects women’s
careers to a higher degree than men (Cahusac and Kanji, 2014; Holth el al.,
2013). A job characterized by good wages, high status and opportunities for
career-development is often shaped to suit the traditional male working model
of someone who is always available for work. (Holith, 2017)
Policies merely creates
the framework for individual action and for the decisions that must be taken by
individuals. However, it does not dictate behaviour directly.
Women’s rights were a
major priority of the 20th century for the UK, and this dramatically
impacted their political policies. Over the years the UK government have set up
several policies that has impacted the work environment in relation to women.
The Equal pay act was
introduced which is supposed to give men and women same equal pay and benefits.
However, there is nothing in the equality act to specifically tackle job
segregation between men and women in the workplace other than perhaps the
public-sector gender equality duty. Then in 1975 the sex discrimination act was
introduced to prohibit direct or indirect gender discrimination against
individuals in the areas of employment, education, the provision of goods,
facilities and services. In 2015 the shared parental leave act was enacted with
objectives of achieving a better work-family life balance for parents with
incentives for fathers to take leave.
In Sweden policy is focused on equality between the sexes in relation to work and family life and on the welfare of children. The perception of the reconciliation of work and family is most positive in Sweden where the employment of mothers is a political objective and the raising of children is also considered a societal duty.
Gender equality and
related policies have been a central concern in Sweden since at least the 1970s
and their governments over the years have been committed to further development
of these policies. The policies that the Swedish governments put up are said to
pursue the following:
In Sweden, some of the most
important reforms concerning gender equality took place in the labour market
and in social policy in the 1970s. These reforms pushed gender equality and
increased women’s prospects to have the same opportunities as men to enter the
labour market, and to remain and develop there. Parts of the unpaid household
and care work, often performed by women, became the responsibility of the
public welfare system. Women thus gained access to employment and greater
financial independence, which increased their well-being and bargaining power
in the household. In addition, men were encouraged and enabled to participate
in family life to a greater extent. These reforms also contributed to the
development of a modern welfare state in Sweden. Some policies that where included
is the Separate income taxation for wife and husband in 1971. This created an
incentive for women to work as their income was no longer seen as part of the
husband’s income. This was more advantageous for both partners to work. There
was also a policy for Development of public child care in 1974 it was said to
be a governments decision. Women were often faced with impossible daily
schedules and frequently had to work unsocial hours when the children’s father
were at home. The development of affordable public child care facilities
available to all is a prerequisite to Sweden’s large proportion of women in
gainful employment. Sweden was the first country to introduce gender-neutral
paid parental leave benefit. And since then this parental leave reform has been
revised several times. Today, women and men are entitled to 480 days of paid
parental leave (16 months) per child. Ninety of those days (3 months) are
reserved for each parent and cannot be transferred to the other parent (the
third reserved month was introduced in 2016). Introducing a third reserved
month for each parent was a measure to achieve a more even distribution of
unpaid household and care work, and gender equality in the labour market.
(source: Gender Equality policy in Sweden (2016) Government offices of Sweden)
Despite the remarkable
growth in women’s labour force participation in recent years, women’s greater
responsibility for childbirth and childcare does seem to be hindering gender
wage equalization. Throughout their working lives, women continue to face
significant obstacles in gaining access to decent work. Inequality between
women and men persist in global labour markets, in respect of opportunities,
treatment and outcomes.
The labour market
position of women in the UK has been generally improving, with higher
employment rates and increases in earnings. However, on these measures women
still fare worse in the Job market; the formal employment rate for women is
lower and female weekly earnings are still less than 70% of male weekly
earnings
Sweden has been described as a social democratic welfare state regime (Esping-Anderson, 1990), as a weak male breadwinner system (Lewis, 1992), and as a nation with an extensive family policy system (Boje and Ejrnaes, 2012). There is a well-developed, publicly funded universal health insurance system, unemployment insurance, and social assistance system, but the state also takes responsibility for the children and the elderly. With publicly subsidized day care centres, public schools and universities, paid maternity and paternity leaves, medical and social care for the elderly, and the statutory right to stay home from work (also paid) with sick children for either parent all financed through the tax system. These policies have resulted in a high rate of labour market participation for women and a comparatively low degree of social stratification. It has also created jobs for women in the public sector: 82% of women changed 20-64 are in the labour force, and about half of them work for the public sector (Statistics Sweden, 2012).
Azmat, G. (2015). Gender Gaps in the UK Labour Market:
jobs, pay and family-freindly policies. The London school of Economics and
Political science.
Bryan McIntosh, R. M. (2012). Motherhood and its
impact on career progression. Gender in Management.
Bryan McIntosh, R. M. (2012). Motherhood and its
impact on career progression. Gender in Management: An international journal.
Gustafsson, A.-K. (2015). Gender equality and Working
conditions. EurWORK.
Holith, L. B. (2017). Gender, availability, and dual
emancipation in the swedish Ict sector, Work . Work, Empolyment and Society ,
230-247.
James Albrecht, P. S. (2014). Parental Leave and The
Glass Ceiling in Sweden. Gender Convergence in The labour Market.
lewis, G. (2014). CIPD people management. .
Lewis, M. (2014). Shared Parental Leave: Steps for UK
Employer. Venulex Legal Summaries.
Ndzi, E. (2017). Shared parental leave: awareness is
key. international journal of law and management.
PwC. (2017). Closing the gender pay gap. Women in
Work Index, 16.
Savage, M. (2013). Access night nurseries; Swedens
round the clock childcare.
Smith, J. (2017). Are fathers rights at work working? Employers
Law, 12-23.
Sverige. (2017). Sweden and Gender Equality.
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