[Brussels, 4 July 2019] A couple of weeks ago, the Council of the EU adopted the Directive on work-life balance for parents and carers, which covers parental leave, paternity leave, carers’ leave and the right to request flexible working arrangements for reasons related to care responsibilities. The new Directive is the most concrete initiative of the European Pillar of Social Rights. However, the Directive only establish minimum standards and it will bring little change in the “best-performing” countries. In other words, Member states with more generous parental leave systems will be able to keep their current national arrangements.
Given that women continue to perform the majority of unpaid care work, the WLB Directive is a step forward to address the unequal distribution of care work between women and men. It is also an opportunity to shift gender stereotypes by promoting the role of men in care and family responsibility. Women and men in the EU should be financially safe and independent while they take care of their children or someone else and Europe must work to ensure that women and men become equal-earners-equal-carers throughout their lives.
The EWL has followed the development of the Directive and we were involved in a round of consultations. After months of negotiations between the European Parliament and the European Council (representing Member State governments), a provisional agreement was reached in February 2019 and, finally, on 13 June 2019 the Council adopted the Directive with a clear majority. Denmark, Hungary, the Netherlands and Slovenia voted against, while Austria and Poland abstained. WLB2These are the legislative changes introduced by the WLB Directive in the form of European minimum standards:
Paternity leave: fathers or second parents (as recognised by national law) will be able to take at least ten working days of leave around the time of birth of a child paid at a level equal to that currently set at EU level for maternity leave (that is, equal to sick-leave level). The right to paternity leave will not be subject to a prior service requirement. However, the payment of paternity leave can be subject to a six-month prior service requirement.
EWL DEMANDS: right to two weeks leave, with full pay and with similar conditions to maternity and parental regarding protection from dismissal.
Parental leave: an individual right to four months of parental leave, from which two months are non-transferable between the parents and are paid. Member States will set the level of payment and the age limit of the child (at least, up to eight years old).
EWL DEMANDS: individual right to leave of four months, where whole period is non-transferable and fully paid.
Carers’ leave: a new concept at EU level for workers caring for a relative (or to a person who lives in the same household as the worker) in need of care or support due to serious medical reasons. Carers will be able to take 5 working days per year. Member states will set what is considered under “serious medical reasons” and they may introduce additional conditions for the exercise of this right.
EWL DEMANDS: individual right to 12 working days per year, to be taken full-time, part-time or needs-based, and fully paid. Define dependency and care from a social and not a medical perspective.
Flexible working arrangements: right for parents of children and carers to request (not automatically granted) adjustment of their working patterns, including the use of remote working arrangements, flexible working schedules or reduced working hours. There is no obligation for the employer to grant the requested change.
EWL DEMANDS: clear guidance on flexibility in practice, working time outside “traditional” working hours, flexibility on return from leave and right to “switch off”.
On the other hand, the Directive is a missed opportunity to strengthen maternity protection for women. The EWL has demanded for a long time the revision of the Maternity Leave and calls for:
Right to 20 weeks of leave (six weeks mandatory) with full pay during leave and with no conditionality to access leave or payment.
Six-month protection from dismissal on the basis of maternity and childbirth on return to work at the end of duration of maternity leave.
So, what happens next?
The EWL, together with our partners, will follow closely the enforcement of the WLB Directive. The EWL will monitor the transposition of the Directive into national law to ensure that adequate payment of all forms of leave is implemented and the diversity of families in Europe is respected.
The EWL will continue calling for a boost of the care economy as an investment for the present and the future and a revision of the maternity leave.
For a more in-depth assessment of the Work-Life Balance Directive, see the attachment bellow. WLB EWL Assessment 2019
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womenlobby.org
4 April 2025
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