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September 2003 - Ref 923 Families and work in the twenty-first century Family life appears to be under pressure from the twenty-four-hour society. Workplaces are also feeling pressure from global competition. Since 1998, the JRF has supported a programme of research considering how families and businesses are coping with and responding to these pressures. In this Foundations, Professor Shirley Dex - of the Institute of Education, London University - reviews the main findings from that research programme and the issues raised for policy and practice. As well as contributing important insights into where families feel most pressure, the research offers an opportunity to consider whether recent government policy aimed at helping working families - fast-moving as it has been - is going in the right direction. The projects found that parents' views run contrary to the thrust of government policy on a number of issues, including child care and working at weekends.
The policy background
A mixture of tax changes, new regulations, incentives and encouragement to better practice is in place to help achieve the child poverty target. New legislation covers better maternity leave and pay (enacted in 1999 and 2003), new parental leave (1999), protection for part-time employees (2000), paid paternity leave (2003), and opportunities for some parents to have greater flexibility at work to suit their individual needs (2003). The Work-Life Balance Challenge Fund, launched in 2000, also offered employers encouragement and assistance to introduce more flexible working arrangements. Its initial aims were to allow employee parents greater opportunity to combine work and family life without such changes disadvantaging business. As policy has developed, greater flexibility at work has become linked more closely to addressing the child poverty targets (HM Treasury/DTI, 2003). The JRF Work and Family Life Research Programme, launched before these changes occurred, has run alongside them. At times, the research has been able to feed into the policy consultations and discussions. Policy developments have moved at breathtaking speed and, in some cases, without sound evidence on which to build. However, the messages of the research programme are still highly relevant. In some cases they support the direction policy and regulation have taken, contributing much-needed evidence. In other cases, findings suggest that government targets will be difficult to meet. This research programme did not set out to help the Government reduce child poverty. It was not specifically focused on the boundary between benefits and paid work, although several projects collected information from parents who had crossed this line. The research did set out to improve our understanding of how most British families - occupying the broad middle ground of circumstances - were managing work and family life at the turn of the twenty-first century. This broader agenda is relevant to the Government's more focused interests but also to a much wider policy agenda including: labour market efficiency; fertility and the population size; the social care labour force; the individualisation of social life; social capital development; fathers' roles; the length of marriages; outcomes for children; and opportunities for private, public and voluntary sector partnerships. The programme offered a timely opportunity to consider how well families, employers and communities, as well as the Government, are responding to the pressures that families and workplaces face. This Foundations outlines some of the themes of the programme and its main messages. Trends in parents' employment
The pros and cons of two earners
For some, the dual or 1.5 earner strategy also provides extra income for holidays and for treats, so that children do not feel excluded from the consumer society. Many mothers find there are additional benefits from working (Reynolds et al., 2003; La Valle et al., 2002; Mauthner et al., 2001; Backett-Milburn et al., 2001):
The signs of stress in family life from having two earners are most evident in the high proportion of employed mothers (approximately half) who say they would prefer to stop work altogether and stay home looking after their children if they could afford to do so (Bell and La Valle, 2003). Work-life balance and the workplace The business case There were encouraging signs that career prospects were not penalised if employees made use of flexible working arrangements (Crompton et al., 2003 forthcoming). Problem areas
New approaches Larger organisations can retain the customised approach of smaller businesses by having fewer policies but an over-arching and explicit statement that employees can ask for the arrangements they want. This can also help avoid some of the problems of lack of awareness of 'family-friendly' policies. Encouraging employees to offer suggestions about how to improve working arrangements and productivity can also help to build employer-employee partnerships and trust and produce workable solutions to individuals' specific needs. Trust was found to underlie good working relationships across different types and sizes of organisations ranging from family businesses, other small businesses to large private or public sector organisations (Dex and Scheibl, 2002; Basu and Altinay, 2003 forthcoming; Yeandle et al., 2002; Phillips et al., 2002). Suggestions for helping to extend best-practice flexible working in workplaces are listed in Box 1. Trade unions are the obvious institutions to get involved in this sort of partnership building towards best practice. Flexibility is very popular among employees and much appreciated in workplaces which offer it. However, working at weekends, especially Sundays, was the most unpopular working arrangement among parents. Given the popularity of flexible working, the lack of serious disadvantages, and even a good business case for some arrangements, the argument for having more such policies is strong. The Government's introduction, in 2003, of parents' right to ask for flexible working is a move in the right direction. It is also in tune with the way small businesses introduce and operate flexible working. However, by its restriction to parents, the new regulation runs the risk of generating resentment within workplaces where, according to these research projects, feelings of inequity and resentment currently are rare. This would be a pity. The effects of work on family life The studies reached a number of conclusions about the overall effects of work on family life.
Parents identified the following negative day-to-day effects from work:
Other bad effects were considerably more pronounced for couples and lone parents who worked at atypical times of day (La Valle et al., 2002; Bell and La Valle et al., 2003; Baines et al., 2003 forthcoming), reducing their frequencies of:
When facing competing demands, mothers put children and work first with time for self and their partner ranked second (Reynolds et al., 2003; La Valle et al., 2002). Fathers' involvement in family life It is often assumed that fathers give priority to work over family and mothers the reverse. But fathers and mothers were similar in many ways.
Child care Problem areas
In addition, co-ordinating different child care provision was problematic for employed parents, especially in families with more than one young child (Skinner, 2003). Getting children from care in one place to care in another, either early in the morning, at midday or the end of school, led to considerable pressure on two-parent families and made some one-parent families feel it was so impossible that employment was not an option. Co-ordinating child care, the geographical spread of provision and associated transport provision need more detailed consideration in the National Strategy if lone parents and even some couples are to be able to take up employment or have more than one child. While it may be possible, even efficient, for schools to play a bigger role in organising care, moving into being providers or organisers of child care would involve a departure from their current roles as educators and may be resisted. Existing child care providers face significant problems in trying to extend their services outside of the normal working day, even where they are willing to do so. There are staffing as well as other barriers. Childminders have done most to offer flexible services by extending their hours a little either side of the standard working day. But all child care providers thought further extension would encroach on their own family time and was therefore unacceptable. Similarly, other childcare providers thought that there would be problems finding staff to work at atypical times (Statham and Mooney, 2003). Preference for informal child care What parents valued about child care was very evident in the choices they made. The Government's focus on subsidising formal child care may well be unlikely to persuade the parents it seeks to influence, many of whom prefer informal care, to take up employment. In this sense, National Child Care Strategy provision goes against the child care preferences of at least some parents. Fathers in families from lower socio-economic groups were doing more child care than those from families with higher socio-economic status (La Valle et al., 2002). The paradox here is that these fathers often express more traditional views about families and the gendered division of labour. But in practice, they are more prepared to break the traditional division of labour by looking after their own children while the mother works. Some of the higher earning fathers expressed more egalitarian views but worked such long hours that this precluded them living up to their expressed values in terms of the time they could spend with their families. Informal child care arrangements from relatives, friends and neighbours had other advantages. These relationships are the substance or glue of communities. Some commentators argue that social life has become more fragmented and isolated. Parents' time to engage in maintaining relationships with the wider family, friends and spouses, as well as engaging in voluntary activities, has undoubtedly been squeezed by engaging in paid work. However, one network that has become more central and vital, especially to employed mothers, is the child care network. Parents were found to be retaining links with their relatives, friends and neighbours because of child care - low income and less mobile families to a greater extent than higher income and more highly mobile ones (La Valle et al., 2002; Bell and La Valle, 2003; Skinner, 2003; Green and Canny, 2003; Yeandle et al., 2002; Backett-Milburn et al., 2002, Reynolds et al., 2003). There was much use of informal child care as the main form of care while mothers were at work, as other regular surveys confirm. Even when mothers used more formal types of care, most also needed either regular or occasional help from informal carers in order to be reliable workers and cope with family emergencies or sickness, unscheduled or ad hoc school holidays or flexibility at the start and end of work. These are important networks. Their importance becomes more visible when families had to relocate and were torn away from such relationships (Green and Canny, 2003; Yeandle et al., 2002). While paid services can replace reliance on family and friends to some extent, they cannot offer the same degree of flexibility, trust, reciprocity or social cohesion that social relationships offer. Further opportunities for partnerships
Opportunities for better and more effective partnerships were identified under each of these headings and a selection are listed below. The childcare infrastructure has already been considered. Employers
Trade unions
Are families coping? The strategy of having two earners, one full-time - usually the father - and one part-time - usually the mother, appears to be effective in reducing risk related to sustaining family finances and broadly provides the standard of living to which most low- and middle-income families aspire. Examining these families at a point in time, as these projects have tended to do, shows that they are managing to juggle work and family life and are not in state of total collapse. However, there are many tired parents, a large amount of dissatisfaction and even a desire to cut down working hours or give up paid work altogether. Where two-earner or even 1.5 earner families are most under pressure and obviously on the edge of coping is where they have heavy responsibility for caring for older adults, have a disabled child, have the double caring loads for older adults and young children, or are in low-earning, vulnerable self employment. Given the trend towards an older age of first childbirth for mothers, this relatively new pattern of double care loads is likely to increase. Parents expressed the strongest desire for change as follows (La Valle et al., 2002):
There is, of course, a shrinking group of families which still relies on one, mainly male, earner. This group is larger if viewed over time rather than at one cross-sectional point in time since many couples still have a period when one (usually male) partner works and the other (usually female) partner stays at home when children are born and very young. We know relatively little about the group who persist with one earner for a longer period while their children are growing up and this is a gap that it would be useful to fill. Certainly, policy and benefit regimes have been largely ignoring this group. One of the Government's main principles for addressing family issues has been that paid work is the route out of poverty for families. Clearly most of the Government's efforts have been directed at the no-earner households and lone parents on benefit, few of whom were researched in this programme. Dual-earner couples and lone parents who are working in low-paid jobs in these research projects, undertaken before the most recent 2003 Budget changes that are aimed at helping financially, were managing to keep out of poverty, but it was a difficult job for some. Many faced issues related to the cost and organisation of child care since their budgets were finely tuned with little slack. The 2003 Budget changes will help with household finances for some of these parents. However, survey work suggested that many mothers' preferences run counter to the direction Government policy is trying to encourage since they would prefer to work less rather than more while their children are young. The other problem with the Government's seemingly worthy target for families to be financially independent is that it signals that only paid work is important. This is unfortunate since it reinforces the low value placed on unpaid work and care. Even childminders who are paid to care expressed that this low valuation affected them and their morale (Mooney et al., 2001; Statham and Mooney, 2003; Baines et al., 2003 forthcoming). There is also an overlapping implication: paid child care is better than parental care. However, many parents prefer unpaid child care. In addition, unpaid child care helps to create a sense of community and also is more flexible and cheaper for parents and the public purse. Policy should try to avoid destructive effects on parents' sense of community. It should also be noted, however, that materialism and consumerism are strong drivers of parents' and children's values and aspirations at both middle- and low-income levels. Many parents believe that they are not giving their children the best start in life if they cannot buy them the latest toys or clothes. While this is a strong motivator for all parents, there is also a sense in which it is an unreachable goal. The demands keep on, fuelled by advertising and peer pressure and are never fulfilled. In this sense an escape from feelings of relative disadvantage will rarely be achieved. Despite the plethora of new legislation and policy on families and work, and the need for some of these new employment laws to bed down, there are several areas where the Government needs to consider further interventions, alongside its targets to eliminate child poverty. Long hours of work and Sunday and weekend work by parents need further consideration. The issue of advertising to children also needs consideration since this may be helping to nullify any feelings of improvement from additional income in low-income families. About this Foundations This has been a programme about mainstream middle-ground family life in Britain at the turn of the twenty-first century. It has not incorporated the extremes where families have no employment, or too much employment in very long hours. The selection of the middle ground, covering the majority of heterosexual couple families and employed lone parents, was partly by design (avoiding the families reliant on benefits that JRF's other research programmes already covered), partly by chance (according to which good quality research projects responded to the 'Call for proposals'), and partly through the constraints of research (it is difficult for researchers to recruit parents working very long hours whose work dominates over home life). The research projects included nationally representative surveys of parents, detailed qualitative interviews with mothers, fathers and some children, secondary analyses of existing sources and new data collection using survey, case study, focus group, and matched sample designs and methods. How to get further information Click on the 'order report' icon in the left margin to order online.
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This
Foundations is based on the following studies. Titles marked
with * are (or will be) available from York Publishing Services.
Reference numbers are given for any Findings summary published by the
Foundation. * Backett-Milburn, Kathryn, Cunningham-Burley, Sarah and Kemmer,
Debbie (2001), Caring and providing: Lone and partnered working
mothers in Scotland, Family Policy Studies Centre (ISBN 1 901455 61 0,
£12.95). 'Experiences of lone and partnered working mothers in
Scotland',
Findings No. 381. * Baines, Susan, Wheelock, Jane and Gelder, Ulrike (2003
forthcoming), Riding the rollercoaster: Family life and
self-employment, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 503 8, £13.95 tbc). * Basu, Anuradha and Altinay, Eser (2003 forthcoming),
Family and
work in ethnic minority businesses, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 548
8, £11.95 tbc). * Bell, Alice and La Valle, Ivana (2003), Combining self employment
and family life, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 533 X). 'Combining
self-employment and family life',
Findings No. 663. * Bond, Sue, Hyman, Jeff, Summers, Juliette and Wise, Sarah (2002),
Family-friendly working? Putting policy into practice, York Publishing
Services (ISBN 1 84263 050 4, £14.95). 'Putting family-friendly
working policies into practice',
Findings, No. 222. * Crompton, Rosemary, Dennett, Jane and Wigfield, Andrea (2003
forthcoming), Organisations, careers and caring, The Policy Press
(ISBN 1 86134 500 3, £11.95 tbc). * Dex, Shirley and Scheibl, Fiona (2002), SMEs and flexible working
arrangements, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 432 5, £12.95). 'Smaller
organisations and flexible working arrangements',
Findings No. 5102. * Dex, Shirley and Smith, Colin (2002), The nature and pattern of
family-friendly employment policies in Britain, The Policy Press (ISBN
1 86134 433 3, £12.95). 'The nature and pattern of family-friendly
employment policies in Britain',
Findings No. 5112. DfEE (Department for Education and Employment) (1998),
Meeting the
childcare challenge, CM 3959, Department for Education and Employment. DH (Department of Health) (1999), Caring about carers: A national
strategy for carers, HMSO. DTI (2000), Work and parents: Competitiveness and choice. A
research review, Department of Trade and Industry. * Ermisch, John and Franscesconi, Marco (2001),
The effects of
parents' employment on children's lives, Family Policy Studies Centre
(ISBN 1 901455 60 2, £10.95). 'The effects of parents' employment on
outcomes for children',
Findings No. 321. * Green, Anne and Canny, Angela (2003) Geographical mobility:
Family impacts, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 501 1, £13.95). 'The
effects on families of job relocations',
Findings, No. 533. HM Treasury/DTI (2003), Balancing work and family life: Enhancing
choice and support for parents, HMSO. Home Office (1998), Supporting families: A consultation document,
The Home Office. * Houston, Diane and Waumsley, Julie (2003 forthcoming),
Attitudes
to flexible working and family life, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134
549 6, £13.95 tbc). Labour Market Trends (2002), Office for National Statistics. * La Valle, Ivana, Arthur, Sue, Millward, Christine, Scott, James
and Clayden, Marion (2002), Happy families? Atypical work and its
influence on family life, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 481 3,
£14.95). 'The influence of atypical working hours on family life',
Findings No. 982. * Mauthner, Natasha, McKee, Lorna and Strell, Monika (2001),
Work
and family life in rural communities, York Publishing Services (ISBN 1
84263 054 7, £14.95). 'Work and family life in rural communities',
Findings No. 971. * Mooney, Ann, Knight, Abigail, Moss, Peter and Owen, Charlie
(2001), Who cares? Childminding in the 1990s, Family Policy Studies
Centre (ISBN 1 901455 62 9, £13.95). 'Childminding in the 1990s',
Findings No. 511. * Phillips, Judith, Bernard, Miriam and Chittenden, Minda (2002),
Juggling work and care: The experiences of working carers of older
adults, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 443 0, £10.95). 'The
experiences of working carers of older adults',
Findings No. 7112. * Reynolds, Tracey, Callender, Claire and Edwards, Rosalind (2003)
Caring and counting: The impact of mothers' employment on family
relationships, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 534 8, £14.95). 'The
impact of mothers' employment on family relationships',
Findings No.
773. * Skinner, Christine (2003), Running around in circles:
Co-ordinating childcare, education and work, The Policy Press (ISBN 1
86134 466 X, £13.95). 'How parents co-ordinate childcare, education
and work',
Findings No. 593. * Statham, June and Mooney, Ann (2003), Around the clock: Childcare
services at atypical times, The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 502 X,
£11.95). 'Childcare services at atypical times',
Findings No. 653. * Yeandle, Sue, Crompton, Rosemary, Wigfield, Andrea and Dennett,
Jane (2002), Employed carers and family-friendly employment policies,
The Policy Press (ISBN 1 86134 480 5, £11.95). 'Employers, communities
and family-friendly employment policies',
Findings, No. 972. * Yeandle, Sue, Phillips, Judith, Scheibl, Fiona, Wigfield, Andrea
and Wise, Sarah (2003 forthcoming), Line managers' roles in
implementing family-friendly employment (ISBN 1 86134 556 9, £11.95 tbc). |
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