Sweden just trumpeted a generous enhancement to its national parental leave law: new dads will receive more paid baby-bonding time, and they’re required to take it.
While the U.S. continues to lag behind most developed nations in guaranteeing paid family leave to its workforce (hint: it doesn’t), Sweden is bolstering its widely praised paid parental leave program to further benefit fathers. Currently, Swedish law requires that dads take at least two of the 16 available months offered to new parents, while the remaining months are divvied up however parents choose.
In a fiercer push for gender equality, however, the Swedish government announced that in 2016 dads will be required to take at least three months of job-protected leave – time that mothers cannot use. The ultimate aim? To encourage fathers to take on a larger childcare role in a country where the workforce is largely male-dominated: in 2013, about 75% of men worked full-time, compared to only 40% of women.
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The adjustment appears exceedingly generous in comparison to paid leave options in the U.S., where responsibility is left to states and employers to enact or improve upon parent-friendly policies.
This week, Wall Street’s investment banking giant Goldman Sachs led the pack in paternity leave progress after introducing a welcome tweak to its policy:









