Maggie Berry: Family friendly working arrangements available at HSBC bank

-

All parents working for HSBC will be able to return to work on a part-time basis after maternity or paternity leave, the banking giant announced recently.

Employers are not obligated to provide part-time positions for returning parents, although parents are entitled to ask for it. So we should give full credit to HSBC for recognising that it is possible to balance family life with career development.

The bank is the first large corporate in the UK to offer a guaranteed part-time position to staff returning from maternity/paternity leave. The role will be on the same level and with a pro rata salary to the position they held prior to their leave.

About 1,100 HSBC employees take parental leave after childbirth every year and 87% of them want to go back to work. The bank’s head of employee relations said the flexible working arrangements would help its employees maintain their household income whilst still taking care of their children.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

She went on to explain that the bank was committed to bringing more women into senior positions and she hoped that the guarantee of a part-time role would encourage them to continue with their career.

As well as this new guarantee, the bank gives mothers 14 weeks full pay when they go on maternity leave instead of the statutory requirement of 90% salary for 6 weeks. Parents are also allowed to take up to 5 days paid leave each year for family emergencies.

The bank also has a scheme that allows employees to take a year long unpaid sabbatical if they want a period of extended leave and staff who apply to rejoin the bank within five years of leaving will receive priority over other applicants.

All told, HSBC does seem to be a family friendly employer. It’s a pity there aren’t more large organisations in the UK that realise that women can have a successful career and raise a family at the same time.

How difficult would other HR departments throughout the UK find it to offer a similar set of benefits to staff returning from parental leave? Will women be encouraged to join HSBC specifically because it offers these benefits?

About Maggie Berry

 

Latest news

Personalising the Benefits Experience: Why Employees Need More Than Just Information

This article explores how organisations can move beyond passive, one-size-fits-all communication to deliver relevant, timely, and simplified benefits experiences that reflect employee needs and life stages.

Grant Wyatt: When the love dies – when staying is riskier than quitting

When people fall out of love with their employer, or feel their employer has fallen out of love with them, what follows is rarely a clean exit.

£30bn pension savings window opens for employers ahead of 2029 reforms

UK employers could unlock billions in National Insurance savings by expanding pension salary sacrifice schemes before new limits take effect in 2029.

Expat jobs ‘fail early as costs hit $79,000 per worker’

International assignments are ending early due to family strain, isolation and poor preparation, as rising costs increase pressure on employers.
- Advertisement -

The Great Employer Divide: What the evidence shows about employers that back parents and carers — and those that don’t

Understand the growing divide between organisations that effectively support working parents and carers — and those that don’t. This session shows how to turn employee experience data into a clear business case, linking care-related pressures to performance, retention and workforce stability.

Scott Mills exit puts spotlight on risk of ‘news vacuum’ in high-profile dismissals

Sudden departure of a long-serving BBC presenter raises questions about how employers manage high-profile dismissals and limit speculation.

Must read

Emma Harvey: I’m entitled to a workplace pension? 1 in 3 Brits still have no idea

Despite the recent £8m TV campaign from the DWP, research by online pension adviser, Wealth Wizards, has shown that by the end of 2015, an alarming thirty-eight per cent of working Britain’s still do not know what auto-enrolment is or realise that they are entitled to a workplace pension.

Adam Nuckley: Don’t shoot the gender pay messenger

Is compulsory gender pay reporting really - as King’s College economics professor, Baroness Wolf, described - just “gesture politics” which “will do nothing whatsoever about the things that are really a problem for poorly paid women and which have nothing to do with widespread overt pay discrimination, for which there is no evidence at all any more anyway?”
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you