Employment Rights Act reforms seen as ‘huge boost for women’

-

The measures form part of the Employment Rights Act, which introduces changes to statutory sick pay eligibility, paternity leave and parental leave. The reforms aim to widen access to workplace protections and address longstanding gaps affecting lower paid employees.

An analysis by the Trades Union Congress (TUC), the UK’s national trade union federation representing more than five million workers, suggested that millions of women could see improved support once the changes take effect.

Sick pay changes expected to reach millions

According to the TUC, around 4.7 million women are expected to benefit from stronger statutory sick pay provisions from April.

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

 

The organisation said more than 830,000 women will become eligible for statutory sick pay for the first time. Many of those workers currently fall below the earnings threshold of £125 a week required to qualify under existing rules.

The TUC said low-paid workers, particularly women, had long faced the risk of having no financial protection when illness prevents them from working.

TUC chief Paul Nowak said the reforms address longstanding problems in the system. “For too long women have borne the brunt of a sick pay system that is not fit for purpose, and a culture of exploitative, insecure work,” he said.

“That’s why the Employment Rights Act is an important step forward for women at work.”

New parental leave rights from day one

Further changes linked to the Employment Rights Act will introduce day one rights for certain forms of parental leave.

Fathers and partners will gain a day one entitlement to paternity leave, while all parents will have the right to unpaid parental leave from the start of their employment rather than after a qualifying period.

The government said the wider package of measures is intended to strengthen job security and support working parents, particularly women who may face career disruption after having children.

A government spokesperson said the legislation would improve workplace protections while also strengthening the economy. “The Employment Rights Act is a huge boost for women in the workplace – introducing enhanced protections for pregnant women and new mothers, menopause action plans for large employers and rights for parental leave from day one,” they said.

“Women thriving in the workplace is not just important for equality but for boosting economic growth.”

Motherhood pay gap remains a concern

The reforms come amid continuing concerns about the financial impact of parenthood on women’s earnings.

Shared parental leave was introduced in 2014, allowing parents to divide up to 50 weeks of leave and up to 37 weeks of statutory pay following the birth or adoption of a child. Under current rules, new fathers can take two weeks of paid leave at a rate of either £187.18 a week or 90 percent of average weekly earnings, whichever is lower.

But research has shown that many mothers still face significant long-term pay reductions after having children.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) found that women’s average monthly earnings were 42 percent lower five years after the birth of their first child compared with their pay a year before the birth.

The reduction amounted to about £1,051 per month on average and translated into a total loss of £65,618 in earnings over five years.

The ONS said the decline reflected a pattern in which mothers become less likely to remain in paid employment or return to work at the same earning level after having children.

The forthcoming changes to sick pay and parental leave are intended in part to reduce some of the pressures that contribute to that gap, particularly among lower paid workers who have historically had the least access to employment protections.

William Furney is a Managing Editor at Black and White Trading Ltd based in Kingston upon Hull, UK. He is a prolific author and contributor at Workplace Wellbeing Professional, with over 127 published posts covering HR, employee engagement, and workplace wellbeing topics. His writing focuses on contemporary employment issues including pension schemes, employee health, financial struggles affecting workers, and broader workplace trends.

Latest news

Kevin Hähnlein: Why digital equity is the next frontier for AI and productivity

As governments and private sectors accelerate AI deployment, the urgency to reach the non-desk workforce has never been greater.

Young workers quitting jobs because they feel unable to speak up, employers warned

Young workers are considering leaving jobs because they do not feel psychologically safe at work, raising concerns during Mental Health Awareness Week.

Brené Brown on workplace trust

"There's not a CEO alive that doesn't know that there's nothing harder than building trust on teams."

Major employers face scrutiny over workplace toilet policies after court ruling

Large firms are facing growing pressure to clarify staff guidance on single-sex spaces following last year’s Supreme Court decision.
- Advertisement -

New Sainsbury’s dismissal reignites debate over shoplifting intervention policies

Supermarket safety policies are under scrutiny as more retail workers lose jobs after confronting suspected thieves.

Cheryl-Anne Cooper: How human-led guest services drive employee wellbeing

The way people feel in a workplace matters just as much as how it functions, and guest service teams deliver experiences that reflect a brand’s culture and values.

Must read

Sabby Gill: Learning to work in the 2020s

"There are ways to bridge the growing skills gap, plan for roles you don’t even know about yet and start solving this problem now before it’s too late."

Kelly Sayers: Preparing to compete and ‘fessing up’.

Employees changing jobs is a fact of life. But...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you