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WORKING IN SWITZERLAND

Why part-time work is a costly compromise for women in Switzerland

Women in Switzerland, not just mothers, are drawn to part-time work. This choice is almost twice as common in Switzerland as in the European Union but taking the part-time path comes at a price, Clare O’Dea writes. Is it worth it?

Why part-time work is a costly compromise for women in Switzerland
Why part-time work is a costly compromise for Swiss women. Photo by CoWomen on Unsplash

Part-time work is more popular than ever in Switzerland.

Just over 18 percent of working men are part-timers as opposed to 58.6 percent of working women. This makes Switzerland a special case in the region considering that 30 percent of employed women and only 8 percent of men in the EU work part time.

You’d like to think that these 58.6 percent of working women in Switzerland know what they’re doing, that they’ve weighed up the options and made a free choice. But what I see is mothers in particular being pushed into the part-time trap from which it is very difficult to climb out again.   

On an online forum for immigrant mothers with Swiss partners, I recently followed an intense discussion about the challenges of returning to work after maternity leave or a longer career break to care for children. The women were really stressed by the problem of finding the right childcare and how they would deal with the logistics and the emotions of the first few weeks of the new routine.

OPINION: Switzerland can no longer justify a lower retirement age for women

There were dozens of stories and the women were being supportive of each other and giving advice, but not a single person mentioned the fathers’ role in this major life change. One thing, possibly the only thing, that would make the transition easier would be if the fathers handled it.

Why is it that mothers missing months or even years of paid work is totally normal but the idea that a father would miss a few weeks is unthinkable? Imagine a father taking a month off to acclimatise his child to the creche, deal with the mornings, the separation anxiety, the first sick days. Imagine the mother just getting ready and going out the door for an untroubled workday.

But there is no concept of parental leave, and truly sharing the burden is rare. The challenge of reconciling family and working life is fundamentally seen as the woman’s problem. It is her labour at home that is being replaced – therefore it is her problem. No wonder so few young mothers can consider full-time employment.

But by opting to work part time, women are kissing goodbye to much more than income. Because a lower percentage in employment means losing out in many concrete ways – from job security to pension provision. It means fewer opportunities for further education and career advancement. In their employers’ eyes, they are seen as useful up to a point but stripped of potential.

Part-time workers also tend to take on jobs below their qualification and experience level because that’s all they can get. This makes it difficult for women to re-enter full-time employment later at the same level they once took for granted.

It also means women create a role for themselves at home that is very difficult to replace. The hours of paid work decrease to be replaced by hours of unpaid work and home becomes a second workplace when the domestic burden falls to one person.

According to Switzerland’s Federal Statistics Office Labour Force Survey, the total time spent on paid and unpaid work in 2020 was roughly 46 hours per week for both men and women. Women consistently spent more time on unpaid domestic and family work than men did.

READ ALSO: How does paternity leave work in Switzerland and who can claim it?

There are some deeply ingrained attitudes that make this division of roles hard to avoid. The way the Swiss economy is structured, men are ‘naturally’ better at making money. They magically choose higher-earning jobs and magically rise higher in those jobs over time. Essentially, their role as breadwinners is respected and rewarded. 

Everyone wants what’s best for their children and the message in Switzerland is that a mother’s care is the first and best choice, with father’s care tied with grandparents’ care viewed as the next best thing. Placing your child in the care of strangers is something people try to keep to a minimum.

This must have something to do with how families in the recent past who couldn’t manage financially were punished by losing custody of their children. Of course times have changed, but the ideal Swiss family is still one with an abundance of mother’s time and love, backed up by a decent income brought home by the father.

Not everyone conforms. Many families have found alternative models, either with both parents working part time or taking turns in the role of main earner as a way of keeping both careers on track. It would be nice to see these options gain popularity.

One of the main things that would make part-time work more of a free choice is – no surprise – more affordable childcare. Costs in Switzerland are among the highest in the OECD. The framing needs to change too. It’s important that parents view childcare as something that enables both of them to work, and is not just there to replace the mother’s presence.

READ ALSO: Five things to consider when organising childcare in Switzerland

On the surface, going along with traditional roles, where the woman does less paid work and more unpaid work, makes life easier for a family. They get social approval, (probably) a less stressful life and the structures to support the model. The man’s career and earning power is boosted by the cachet of being the main breadwinner and by the practical benefit of having someone covering the bases at home.

The arrangement looks less sensible in the case of a marriage break-up or widowhood but who goes through life, especially the blur of the child-raising years, expecting things to go so badly wrong?

For better or worse, it looks like Swiss society has latched onto the current model as a version of progress everyone can live with. Before Swiss women can lean in, Swiss men have to lean across and give them the space. For that to happen, both sexes have to want it. Time will tell if the appetite for change is there.

 

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OPINION AND ANALYSIS

OPINION: Switzerland is a better place than 20 years ago, but much can still improve

From attitudes towards foreigners and improvements in work-life balance, Clare O'Dea examines how Switzerland has changed over the last 20 years and how it hasn't ('the Swiss still don't know how to queue'). Her new book All About Switzerland is now available - details below.

OPINION: Switzerland is a better place than 20 years ago, but much can still improve

In the 20 years that I’ve been writing about Switzerland, I’ve tended to focus on one part of the picture at a time. Standing back from the canvas, I can see that there has been a pretty positive evolution in the country over that time.

The change has happened in measurable ways – an extra 1.6 million inhabitants, for one thing – but also in ways that are difficult to define. What I notice is more tolerance, more questioning of the norm, and more focus on fairness.

Some of this has come about through facing up to the wrongs of the past, whether that’s the historical abuse of children in the care system, the denial of the vote to women for so long (until 1971!), or the seizing of dictators’ assets.

Although it takes a painfully long time, mistakes and injustices do eventually come to light and there has been an appropriate reaction of self-recrimination and reflection towards these wrongs, and a willingness to make amends. All this has made Switzerland a better place.

READ ALSO: Are foreigners to blame if they find the Swiss unfriendly?

The foreign factor

When it comes to foreigners, there has definitely been in a positive change in attitudes towards immigrants from the countries of the former Yugoslavia. I detected very strong prejudice against this group in my early years in Switzerland. The second generation has now grown up here and found their place in all walks of Swiss life.

Unfortunately, asylum seekers have borne the brunt of xenophobia in recent years, with the notable exception of Ukrainians fleeing Russia’s war of aggression, who were granted special treatment. Switzerland has welcomed more than 80,000 Ukrainians since 2022, about a quarter of whom have since left the country.

Several cantons, notably Neuchâtel, have led the way in extending more rights to foreign residents and making it easier for them to integrate or obtain Swiss nationality. But naturalisation rates are still low, which is a pity for the Swiss, if only they would realise that.

When I first came to live in Switzerland from Ireland, I benefitted from the newly-valid agreement on the free movement of persons with the EU and EFTA countries. Since then, hundreds of thousands of Swiss and EU/EFTA nationals have been free to move countries for work, adventure, love or retirement.

Those immigrant workers have been a boon to the Swiss economy, which has one of the highest levels of GDP per capita in the world. Travel wise, Switzerland is well and truly integrated into Europe, joining the Schengen Area in 2008.

OPINION: The true signs you are becoming more Swiss than the Swiss

Family matters

Just this week, my twin daughters, who are Swiss citizens, received their first ever ballots for the next federal and cantonal votes on June 9th. Apart from reminding me of the fact that foreigners in Switzerland are largely excluded from the democratic process, this landmark also reminds me of how times have changed in relation to maternity rights.

It is hard to believe that Swiss women did not have statutory paid maternity leave until 2005. Voters had rejected the notion that women should have guaranteed paid leave after giving birth on four previous occasions – 1974, 1984, 1987 and again in 1999.

For all those years, maternity benefits were left up to employers to dictate, which was clearly not enough protection for all mothers. Today, new mothers are entitled to 14 weeks statutory leave but most employers offer more than that. Since 2021, fathers in Switzerland have been entitled to two weeks paternity leave.

There’s definitely room for improvement in the area of work-life balance for families, and there are some ideas in the pipeline, including state subsidies for childcare. With a fertility rate of 1.39 births per woman in 2022, Swiss-born babies is not where population growth is coming from.

Taking turns

One issue that seems almost unfixable in Switzerland is the high cost of healthcare. The country has the second most expensive system in the world, after the United States. Most of the cost is shouldered by households, directly or indirectly.

Whatever about the cost, the care itself is excellent and relatively well staffed. With one in three healthcare workers holding a foreign diploma, including a large proportion of cross-border workers.

On June 9th, Swiss voters will get to decide on two people’s initiatives, both of which aim to curb the cost to consumers. My impression in the past was that the Swiss were reluctant to vote for freebies for themselves. But this may be the right timing for these proposals, considering that voters accepted an initiative in March of this year to increase the state pension by 8 per cent.

When it comes to daily life in Switzerland, politeness and order is the rule, with one exception – the Swiss still don’t know how to queue! I had this experience just the other day waiting outside a small museum that was only letting in a few people at a time. If you can cope with that fundamental flaw, the rest is easy.

All About Switzerland

A dynamic, up-to-date guide to Swiss society and current affairs, All About Switzerland ebook features a selection of 29 articles by Clare O’Dea. The articles were first published by The Local Switzerland from 2022 to 2024. The ebook is available on Amazon, Kobo and other retailers.

Originally from Dublin, Clare O’Dea has lived in Switzerland for two decades. Author of fiction and non-fiction, Clare has had a varied media career in Ireland and Switzerland, with a stint in Russia. She has contributed articles to The Local Switzerland since 2022. Her new book All About Switzerland: Selected articles from The Local Switzerland is Clare’s fourth and is available as an e-book online.

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