Parental Leave and Mothers' Careers: The Relative Importance of Job Protection and Cash Benefits


Autoria(s): Lalive R.; Schlosser A.; Steinhauer A.; Zweimüller J.
Data(s)

01/01/2014

Resumo

Job protection and cash benefits are key elements of parental leave (PL) systems. We study how these two policy instruments affect return-to-work and medium-run labour market outcomes of mothers of newborn children. Analysing a series of major PL policy changes in Austria, we find that longer cash benefits lead to a significant delay in return-to-work, particularly so in the period that is job-protected. Prolonged parental leave absence induced by these policy changes does not appear to hurt mothers' labour market outcomes in the medium run. We build a non-stationary model of job search after childbirth to isolate the role of the two policy instruments. The model matches return-to-work and return to same employer profiles under the various factual policy configurations. Counterfactual policy simulations indicate that a system that combines cash with protection dominates other systems in generating time for care immediately after birth while maintaining mothers' medium-run labour market attachment.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_041FE61A02C3

isbn:0034-6527

http://restud.oxfordjournals.org/

doi:10.1093/restud/rdt028

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Review of Economic Studies, vol. 81, no. 1, pp. 219-265

Palavras-Chave #Parental leave; family and work obligations; return-to-work; labour supply; earnings; family earnings gap
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article