"When a baby arrives in the world, there is no reason it should be just the mother who takes care of it," President Emmanuel Macron said in announcing the extension
Paid paternity leave in France will be doubled from 14 to 28 days starting next summer, and fathers will be required to take at least a week off work after their babies are born, President Emmanuel Macron announced this week, offering one of the more generous plans in Europe.
“When a baby arrives in the world, there is no reason it should be just the mother who takes care of it,” Macron said on Wednesday as he announced the plan, arguing that parents should have “more equality in sharing the responsibility from the first day.”
The announcement caps a year of debate in France about the first 1,000 days of a child’s life. In September, neuropsychiatrist Boris Cyrulnik suggested in a report commissioned by Macron’s government that fathers should be able to take up to nine weeks’ paid leave.
Cyrulnik welcomed the extension announced by Macron, even though it is less ambitious than the report’s suggestion. “It’s a start. Things move gradually — they are not done abruptly,” Cyrulnik said on France Inter radio. “The presence of the father is much more important than we thought, much earlier than we believed.”
Researchers in Europe have long documented the benefits of paternity leaves on fathers, their partners and their children: Fathers who take paternity leave remain more engaged in parenting, studies show, and are more likely to divide household chores after a long leave. And female partners of men who take paternity leave are less inclined to need anti-anxiety prescriptions.
When the extension — which also applies to same-sex couples — comes into effect next July, France will join Lithuania and Spain in offering fathers four weeks of paid leave, according to the data provided by the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm.
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