The tendency is for mothers to also take the bulk of leave entitlements in "shared parental leave" systems, where leave is granted to the couple, who then decide how to split it. New Zealand and Canada have such systems, and the evidence is they do not encourage fathers to take leave.
The best example is probably Sweden, a pioneer of parental leave. It introduced generous entitlements in 1974, paying up to six months in shared leave. But just 10 days were reserved for dads. Just 6% of fathers took up any of the shared leave.
In 1995 Sweden upped the "daddy quota" to bring more balance to the scheme. Now the Swedish government mandates three months' leave as the exclusive right of either parent, with a total of 480 days in shared parental leave.
Emerging evidence
There is increasing evidence of the benefits of ensuring a "daddy quota".
A new study tracking the outcomes of paternity leave in South Korea since 2007 concludes that taking paternity leave is positively associated with life satisfaction for both fathers and mothers.
Iceland introduced four week's dedicated paternity leave in 2001. A 2018 study of 600 families compared the relationship stability of couples who had children just after the reform with those who had children just before (and who were therefore ineligible). The researchers found fathers taking the leave was associated with significantly less relationship breakdown. Their divorce rate was 8.3% lower five years, and 3.4% 15 years later.
One probable reason for these surprising results is indicated in a 2014 Swedish study that suggests fathers' taking more parental leave leads to greater later sharing of childcare and housework. The study, based on surveys of 235 women and 154 men, found there was subsequently more equal division of responsibilities when dads took more than a month's paternity leave.
Improving the system
Given the opportunity, most fathers would like to take more family leave. In a 2014 survey of 1,000 new Australian dads who had taken DaPP leave, 75% said they wished they could have taken more leave. In more than half the cases, the reason was affordability. More than a quarter also reported experiencing discrimination when requesting or taking parental leave.
Given the emerging evidence of long-term positive benefits for families, we need to talk about ways to increase the daddy quota.
Designing parental leave systems isn't easy. Getting the balance right is hard. There are significant equity debates. Who pays? Is it more equitable to pay a flat or minimum rate? Is it more effective to peg the rate to an individual's salary? Should there be a deadline on when leave is taken? The Swedish system, for example, gives parent seven years, recognising that children's needs don't diminish once they can feed themselves.
But if we truly want the best dads possible, we should be discussing how to support them with more than words.
• Sarah Duffy, Lecturer, School of Business, Western Sydney University; Aila Khan, Senior Lecturer in Marketing, Western Sydney University, and Patrick van Esch, Senior Lecturer in Marketing, AUT Business School, Auckland University of Technology
- This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.