Publication:
Awareness, Access, and Perceptions around Parental benefits among Urban Argentinians

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Files in English
English PDF (1.54 MB)
100 downloads
English Text (152.78 KB)
13 downloads
Date
2025-02-13
ISSN
Published
2025-02-13
Editor(s)
Abstract
This paper examines parental benefits in Argentina, focusing on their role in addressing gender inequality and labor market challenges during pregnancy and post-childbirth. Drawing on the International Labor Organization (ILO) Convention 183, the study extends its core elements of maternity protection to evaluate the needs of formal and informal sector workers. Using desk research and a survey of 832 urban Argentinians, the findings highlight a benefits system that is more inclusive than many in the region, with a Parenthood score above the Latin American and Caribbean average. However, significant gaps persist, including disparities between formal and informal workers, complex eligibility rules, insufficient leave durations, limited monitoring mechanisms, and unmet parental needs. To enhance inclusivity and accessibility, the paper recommends extending minimum leave durations, financing paternity leave through social security contributions, simplifying income support programs, improving data transparency, addressing childcare gaps for working parents, and fostering compliance with family-friendly workplace policies. Additionally, there is a need for economic analysis of these programs' fiscal costs and sustainability, particularly given their reliance on hybrid financing models. The study advocates a shift from maternity-focused policies to a comprehensive parental benefits framework that integrates fathers, aligns with labor market dynamics, promotes gender equality, and ensures long-term fiscal sustainability.
Link to Data Set
Citation
Cherchi, Ludovica; Jain, Himanshi. 2025. Awareness, Access, and Perceptions around Parental benefits among Urban Argentinians. Social Protection and Jobs Discussion Papers; 2503. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42819 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO.
Associated URLs
Associated content
Report Series
Other publications in this report series
Journal
Journal Volume
Journal Issue

Related items

Showing items related by metadata.

  • Publication
    Making Progress on Parental Benefits in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
    (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2025-03-24) Jain, Himanshi; Sharma, Ambika; Cherchi, Ludovica
    The World Bank estimates that closing the gender gap in employment would increase long-run gross domestic product (GDP) per capita by 20 percent (Pennings 2022). Realizing this achievement, however, depends not only on removing gender barriers to employment but also and most emphatically on improving the quality of women’s employment. Women’s labor force participation has been stagnant since 1990, at around 53 percent for women compared to 80 percent for men, with the largest gaps in lower-middle-income countries (World Bank 2023). Moreover, as noted by the World Bank’s most recent gender strategy, “Women in the labor force are half as likely as men to have a full-time wage job, their jobs tend to be more vulnerable, and they earn 77 cents for every dollar men earn” (World Bank 2023). This note compiles findings from a study undertaken in two countries—one low income (Nepal) and one middle income (Argentina)—to examine the take-up of existing parental benefits and how parental benefit policies (or the lack thereof) influenced women’s labor market choices, childcare responsibilities, and well-being.
  • Publication
    De Jure and De Facto Coverage of Parental Benefits in Nepal
    (Washington, DC: World Bank, 2025-02-24) Sharma, Ambika; Jain, Himanshi
    Women constitute nearly half of the young working age-population in Nepal but are less likely than men to participate in the labor force. When employed, they work largely in informal, or subsistence work characterized by inadequate social protection and are subject to lower wages relative to men. A key factor behind these outcomes is that childcare responsibilities fall primarily on women with little or inadequate support at work, in the family, or more broadly at a societal level. A holistic and inclusive parental benefits framework which includes all parents (men and women), and all working individuals irrespective of type of employment (formal, informal, part time), is required to bridge the gap between childcare responsibilities and employment for women. The design and implementation of such benefits in developing economies must be cognizant to the trade-offs arising from source of financing (payroll or general revenue); and extent of cost-sharing. This study examines the laws, policies and schemes governing parental benefits in Nepal to outline de-jure coverage. It then presents the results of a survey with 1000 workers in urban Nepal that identify de-facto coverage of these benefits and enquires about labor market choices of mothers and fathers. Four key messages emerge. First, the formal sector workforce, which is less than 10 percent of the employed in Nepal has legislated coverage of thekey parental benefits, but suffers from gaps in awareness, and compliance. Second, workers in the informal sector currently lack parental benefits, 28 percent of whom have to borrow money around childbirth while others stop work, reduce hours or dip into savings. Third, there is a willingness to contribute among informal sector workers, to the recently launched social insurance scheme that includes maternity benefits. Finally, women in Nepal are more likely to shift in and out of employment based on childbirth and childrearing constraints, while men are less likely to use childcare as a factor in work decisions, signaling the need for policies to be complemented with a sustainable social norm change.
  • Publication
    Social Insurance Reform in Jordan : Awareness and Perceptions of Employment Opportunities for Women
    (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014-06) Brodmann, Stefanie; Jillson, Irene; Hassan, Nahla
    The new social insurance law introduced by the Jordanian government in 2010 was created in part to improve the likelihood of women s employment through non- and gender specific changes. This study, which comprised individual interviews and focus groups with Jordanian women and men, employers and opinion leaders, was designed to elicit an understanding of their awareness and knowledge of the new law, designed to increase women s employment - primarily the maternity insurance provision. Those affected by the law remained largely uninformed. Many employers communicated that they did not perceive it as cost neutral for their firms. Participants who were aware of the law, viewed the changes positively and believed with the right circumstances, the law could increase female employment.
  • Publication
    Bhutan Gender Policy Note
    (Washington, DC, 2013-10-10) World Bank Group
    Bhutan has undergone a major socio-economic transformation over the past few decades. Today, as a middle-income country guided by the unique development philosophy of Gross National Happiness, it continues to develop rapidly and become more integrated into the global economy. Coinciding with its development, Bhutan has also made considerable strides in closing gaps in gender equality. The analysis of the Gender Policy Note (GPN) focuses on specific issues related to economic empowerment. It analyzes patterns related to specific aspects of the economic empowerment of both men and women by applying the analytical framework of the 2012 World Development Report on Gender and Development to the Bhutan context. For the areas of focus, the report examines overall indicators on gender and identifies areas where gender gaps persist: agricultural land holding and inheritance practices, and gender gaps in labor markets and job quality. In Bhutan, most women acquire land ownership through inheritance, particularly in matrilineal communities. Unlike in other countries, the matrilineal inheritance practice offers economic opportunities for Bhutanese women and contributes to their relatively equal status with men. In addition, land holding through inheritance can also affect economic choices, particularly the decision to remain in one's village. Bhutan has made tremendous progress in female labor force participation, but the quality of jobs for women is still an issue. Although women's participation in the labor force has increased, it has not translated into improvements in employment quality. The Labor Force Survey shows that Bhutanese women work in lower quality jobs than men-women who earn income from work outside the home; their earnings are only 75 percent of men's earnings. The report recommends policy interventions in five main areas: first, it promotes equal ownership and agency over land. The policy appears to be working well in most areas of the country, and families are moving toward equal inheritance. Second, women's economic endowment could be augmented to increase labor productivity and earnings. Third, child care, along with vocational and life-skills training tailored for girls could women's access to good jobs. Fourth, social norms that lead to gender inequality could be addressed by promoting a greater role for men as fathers and caregivers and men's participation in housework. Finally, the report recognizes the need to conduct further research to better understand the gender gap in happiness.
  • Publication
    Bridging the Gap
    (Washington, DC, 2010) World Bank
    This brief summarizes some of the significant constraints women in Middle East and North Africa (MENA) face: limited labor market mobility, a mismatch between skills acquired in school and what is in demand in the labor market, and legal or institutional factors related to cultural norms, all of which inhibit the transition from school to work. The brief identifies various policy options and outlines the World Bank's strategy for supporting governments in achieving gender parity in the region. Rigorous analytical work, experimental policy pilots and lending operations with a strong gender focus all form part of the Bank's strategy towards reducing gender gaps in economic opportunities.

Users also downloaded

Showing related downloaded files

No results found.