Women can absolutely control when they want to try and have a baby, barring certain circumstances that are hopefully extremely rare. What is it with this complete lack of responsibility and accountability in this area?
What the hell? Lack of responsibility and accountability? How do you even deduce that?
In regards to the maternity leave debate ...
Holy mother of god. I'm not surprised by this statement at all but whenever this comes up, I'm just blown away. Of course you're in the US, a country that can easily have maternity leave but don't. Why? No idea. But I'm a bit confused by a few statements you made.
Turnover is an absolute killer to productivity, and unfortunately I've seen maternity leave abused here in the U.S. Some real life examples I've seen first hand. A woman going on maternity leave, being out for many months, then deciding they aren't returning to the job. In this case the employer is paying this woman's salary and she never had any intention of returning. She thought it was a perfectly justifiable thing to keep getting paid by a company, not work, and having no intention of ever doing so again. I think this is theft, not "maternity leave." Another example. A woman having 3 babies back to back to back, with very little time back in the office before going on maternity leave again for each child. Again this employee was collecting salary continuously, yet working a fraction of that total time. I still do not understand the concept that a private business has to, by law, pay a person to not work because of a life choice they made, simply because this person is a woman.
I'm confused here. You said "...by law., pay a person to not work..." I do hope you're aware that US does NOT have a law that requires businesses and corporations to offer paid maternity leave to their employees (
https://www.oecd.org/els/soc/PF2_1_Parental_leave_systems.pdf).
So what do you mean by law? According to the The
Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, US DOES require 12 weeks of UNPAID leave annually for mothers of newly born or adopted children if they work for a company with 50 OR MORE EMPLOYEES. But that is unpaid and the examples you're mentioning all describe someone being paid while of leave. So I suppose maternity leave was part of the company you're describing?
It is completely up to the company to offer PAID maternity leave (or even unpaid). So, I do not understand what you mean "by law..."
Indeed, if there are individuals who are doing this on purpose (if you can somehow prove that), it is indeed wrong.
What business is it of the company, either way, if someone wants to have a kid? Why are they forced under the threat of the law to pay this person to stop working? I've honestly never heard a good explanation for it. If a company wants to do it, awesome, good for them. I just don't understand the forced by law part of it. It's especially hard on smaller companies where there isn't a lot of overlap to take care of the person on leave.
Still not understanding. There is no law, at least in the US that a company has to be FORCED to do this, especially a small business. And mentioning what business is it of a company if someone wants to have kids? Seriously? What if someone wants a child? And they like their job? What happens then? I mean, it's such an asinine and confusing statement that my mind if baffled that someone would actually type that.
You can't just hire someone to fill in the however many months this person is going to be gone for, because it is likely a highly skilled position with onramp time. You're not just going to fill in a game dev temporarily for six months, sorry. So yeah, unfortunately, it makes sense to be worried if you're a small business. It becomes an extremely expensive endeavor to pay for that kind of thing, and it literally hurts the business at the same time. And it absolutely does get abused.
Again, confused. Let's take a look at Moon Studios, which is based in Austria and has 80 + employees (Linkedin says around 60:
https://www.linkedin.com/company/moongamestudios/).
Now let's look at maternity leave in Austria (taken from here:
"Maternity leave (
Mutterschaftsurlaub) is the statutory time off work for maternity reasons. No woman is allowed to work eight weeks (or 12 weeks in case of high-risk births) before and after her expected due date. This is intended to prevent any stress on, or risk for, the (expectant) mother and the (unborn) child. Maternity benefit (
Wochengeld) is provided as financial compensation during the maternity break.
You will receive
maternity benefit (
Wochengeld) if you have to take a break from employment because of pregnancy."
I don't want to type the whole thing (you can read from the article at your leisure) but I do want to point some things that might put your concerns to rest.
Number one: "Your entitlement to maternity benefit will be suspended if your employer continues to pay your wages (continued payment)."
So, according to this, the employer DOES NOT have to worry about paying the employee unless they want to forfeit their benefits. So, the company or organization does not have to worry money. The government takes care of it (shocking, I know).
Number two: "The amount of your maternity benefit is calculated individually on the basis of your net earnings in the previous three full calendar months before the beginning of maternity leave."
So, if you "abuse" the system, you're not getting the benefits.
I don't know where you're getting the "6 months" part. As per the article I mentioned above, the benefits are not for that long:
"You will receive it for eight weeks before your due date, or before the scheduled date of your Caesarean section, and for eight weeks after delivery. The payment period is prolonged to 12 weeks in case of premature and multiple births and in case of Caesarean sections."
So 16 weeks total they're getting benefits, and that can be nullified if they go to work (if they feel they are ready). And they can also take leave up to 16 weeks (8 before and 8 after delivery (
https://www.leavenetwork.org/filead...work/country_notes/2018/FINAL.Austria2018.pdf). So 4 months top.
Frankly, in this specific situation, things would be planned and maybe the "game dev" could work from home. And maybe the project could get delayed for a few months. Or maybe someone else from the company can pitch in and take over temporarily.
Again, I honestly don't understand what you mean when you say "So yeah,
unfortunately, it makes sense to be worried if you're a small business. It becomes an extremely expensive endeavor to pay for that kind of thing, and it literally hurts the business at the same time. And it absolutely does get abused."
Small business DO NOT require a maternity leave, at least not in the US. And I have already talked about Austria's leave and their safeguards imbedded to prevent abuse. So what is the concern?
What do some of you people want businesses to do? They aren't charities, and money doesn't fall from the sky to cover this stuff. On top of that, if you use a recruiter to hire someone, you're paying that recruiter typically 25-30% of the persons salary to come on board. So lets's say you hire a programmer at 150k a year, then you have to pay the recruiter 50k for that hire. Then let's say the woman get's pregnant and goes on leave in six months. What do you do? You spent all that time and money getting them up to speed, and once they hit a point they can maybe start being really productive, they are gone. Are they even coming back? You've just spent over 100k on essentially nothing. That's real money to these businesses.
Who are you talking about? What specific businesses? Moon studios? If so, I wouldn't worry about them. The government takes care of the leave and benefits. They are NOT, and I REPEAT, THEY ARE NOT spending money on that employee during that leave (if they are, they nullify their leave and benefits).
Are you talking about the US? If so, number one, why? And number two, as I;ve said before, small businesses DO NOT NEED TO ADHERE TO A LAW IN TERMS OF MATERNITY LEAVE. They can have it sure, but it's completely on them at that point.
You're making these scenarios that are so out there and might not even apply at all. Why will the women go on leave for six months? Even if we do take the FMLA law, that is 12 weeks (3 months) or UNPAID LEAVE. UNPAID. That is if the company is 50+ employees. So the company does not have to worry about paying that "women who get's pregnant," as per your words.
Anyway, I'm not against the idea of paying leave and surely there are companies that can easily afford it in general. Companies like Google, Apple, etc. And it makes sense to want to keep your great employees for a long time, hopefully many years, so the time spent on leave in that sense is hopefully a drop in the bucket of their career. If I had a company that could afford it, I would likely happily pay it, but I would also only be hiring superstars, and I don't think superstars would be the kind to take advantage either. But the whole enshrined in law thing is just not right to me. To pretend it's a simple thing and it's all roses and daisies for business and is not abused is a complete fairy tale. It happens, I've seen it, and it's absolutely an issue for small businesses.
Ah yes, of course you're not. What you've just said is DEFINITELY not against the idea.
Again, there IS NO LAW in the US. I'm so confused at this point by your "law" that keeps on coming up.
You've seen maternity leave abused? How is that possible? Honestly? As I've said above, there is no federal law. If it's a 50+ employee company, it's UNPAID time. And small business don't even have to follow that law.
And what about the other end of it? I've seen Women who are near term working in the ICU because they want to "save" their time off. Do you honestly think that is healthy? In the ICU, dealing with life and death and being exposed to many diseases? This happened twice, to two different women, when I was in the ICU. And then again on a medical surgical floor, which can be more physically demanding. How the hell is this safe? And this is a massive hospital chain, and they cannot give maternity leave? Seriously? I've seen them REQUEST time off from other employees. These are health care providers and the hospital cannot even provide them that much? I've seen Nurses and Doctors who are working and they go INTO LABOR right there, taking care of the patient.
I'm flabbergasted that you mention lack of responsibility. So, if a women wants a child, whether it's her own or adopted, that is lack of responsibility?
The sooner federal maternity leave comes to the US, the better.