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1. FAMILIES AND FAMILY POLICIES: DEVELOPING A HOLISTIC POLICY AGENDA
Sheila B. Kamerman
2. Families & Family Policies 2 FAMILIES AND FAMILY POLICY Public commitment to children and their families varies across countries and over time.
New initiatives are needed to cope with new risks and new problems
Recently many countries have explored specialized and innovative benefits designed to strengthen families with children.
3. Families & Family Policies 3 FAMILIES AND FAMILY POLICY Purpose of these developments:
Increasing womens labor force attachment
Facilitating the reconciliation of work and family life
Reducing child poverty
Strengthening childrens rights to education and care
Enhancing child protection, development, and well-being.
4. Families & Family Policies 4 FAMILIES AND FAMILY POLICY In some countries, these goals were incorporated into a holistic approach to an explicit family policy.
In others, the focus remained more categorical, and the family policy more implicit, but still guided by an increased effort at enhancing child well-being.
5. Families & Family Policies 5 FAMILIES AND FAMILY POLICY Organization of paper:
Defining family policy.
Illustrating what an explicit family policy looks like.
Illustrating several important family and child policy initiatives that could be part of a policy package in Hong Kong.
Conclusions
6. Families & Family Policies 6 What is family policy? Family policy is what government does to and for children and their families.
Characteristic of family policy internationally is concern for all children and their families, not just poor families and families with problems.
7. Families & Family Policies 7 What is family policy (contd)? Family policy may be explicit or implicit.
As a subcategory of social policy, family policy can be viewed as:
A policy field,
A policy instrument, or
A criterion by which all social policies can be assessed.
8. Families & Family Policies 8 What is family policy (contd)? Family policy has 4 major characteristics:
A view of the family as a central institution in a society.
A definition of family that allows for a variety of types, usually at least one adult and one child.
A definition of policy that assumes a diversity and multiplicity of policies rather than a single monolithic, comprehensive legislative act.
9. Families & Family Policies 9 What is family policy (contd)? Family policy instruments include:
Cash benefits
Services
Laws
10. Families & Family Policies 10 What is family policy (contd)? The major family policy instruments are:
Income transfers
Early childhood care and education services
Time for parenting, including paid and job protective leaves from employment
Family law
Personal social services and family support programs
Housing allowances and policies
Maternal or family and child health services.
11. Families & Family Policies 11 What is family policy? Today the concept of family policy is a global one.
Families fulfill essential roles in:
Reproduction,
Socialization,
Early education,
Promotion of good health, and
Preparation for adulthood
But families are changing and the need for care and care services is increasing.
12. Families & Family Policies 12 What is family policy (concluded)? To carry out traditional roles as well as new roles, families require help from government.
We need to know more about:
Family changes,
Responses of governments to new family needs and problems
Which family policies may make a difference.
13. Families & Family Policies 13 Countries with Explicit Family Policy Sweden
Historically Swedens family policy has been focused on:
Protecting children,
Redistributing income,
Compensating for the economic costs of rearing children,
Giving people the economic resources to have children when they want to,
Promoting gender equity,
Facilitating the reconciliation of work and family life.
Policy based on principles of universality and individual rights.
14. Families & Family Policies 14 Countries with Explicit Family Policy- Sweden Swedish family policy Includes:
Family cash benefits,
Income-tested housing allowances,
18-month parental leave from employment,
Advance payment of child maintenance to custodial parents,
Protective and supportive services, and
High quality public ECEC
15. Families & Family Policies 15 Countries with Explicit Family Policy - Sweden Sweden
2 current challenges
Increasing difficulty for immigrant youth to obtain jobs
Segregation of native born persons from those perceived as foreign.
16. Families & Family Policies 16 Countries with Explicit Family Policy - France
Exceptionally generous cash benefits and ECEC services.
5 objectives have dominated French family policy
Solidarity
Pro-natilism
Social justice
Protecting the well-being of children, and
Protecting parental choice with regard to parents choosing to work outside the home or remaining at home to rear children.
17. Families & Family Policies 17 Countries with Explicit Family Policy - France
Most important family benefit is universal family allowance
Supplemented by income-tested categorical cash benefits.
Still doesnt cover first children under the basic family allowance.
Primary objective
Horizontal redistribution of income and wealth from those with no children to those with children.
Easing womens burden in balancing family and employment.
18. Families & Family Policies 18 Countries with Explicit Family Policy - France French family policy also includes a large service component:
Universal voluntary and free public preschool system for all 3- to 6- years old, and almost half 2-year olds, covering the full school day
Extended coverage for children with parents working a longer day
Extensive subsidies for infant and child care
An extensive maternal and child health service.
19. Families & Family Policies 19 Family Policy Developments and Innovations Term social protection includes:
Government actions that provide individuals and families with a defined minimum standard of living and protection against traditional social risks
The concept of social protection provides a policy framework for dealing holistically with poverty and vulnerability.
20. Families & Family Policies 20 Family Policy Developments and Innovations (contd) Child-conditioned social protection includes those policies that are contingent on the presence of children:
Social insurance,
Social assistance,
Child-related demogrants,
Social services, and
Social infrastructure.
21. Families & Family Policies 21 Family Policy Developments and Innovations (contd) Social Protection in Hong Kong
Scholars describe the state as playing a major role in Hong Kong, as direct provider of education, health care, housing, and cash benefits for the poor.
Missing from a family policy agenda are:
Child benefits,
Special child-conditioned benefits,
Some sense of the adequacy of these benefits,
More extensive ECEC services,
ECEC services for children under age 3, and
More extensive parental leave.
22. Families & Family Policies 22 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package Income Transfers, in particular:
Asset-based Policy and Child-development Accounts.
Hypothesis is that providing assets before a crisis occurs would lead to:
Less family breakdown,
Fewer school dropouts, and
Less movement of orphans to becoming street children.
23. Families & Family Policies 23 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package (contd) Child Trust Funds
Goal: to strengthen savings habits, help redistribute assets, and educate people to the need for and value of savings.
Unclear whether it will alleviate child policy
24. Families & Family Policies 24 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package Conditional Cash Transfers
New form of cash transfers that focuses on improving:
The health, education, and well-being of poor children and their families
Requires that the receipt of the grants be contingent on:
Enrolling and maintaining children in school,
Obtaining preventive health care, and
In some countries, participating in other social services, and parental employment.
25. Families & Family Policies 25 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package Major questions currently debated:
Whether policy is limited to the more affluent countries or can be adopted by poor countries as well.
Whether provision without conditions would accomplish the same objectives at lower costs.
What is the role of personal social services?.
26. Families & Family Policies 26 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package (contd) Early childhood education and care services (ECEC)
Services for children below compulsory school age involving elements of both physical care and education.
Apart from significant contribution to cognitive stimulation, socialization, child development, and early education, an essential service to employed parents.
27. Families & Family Policies 27 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package (contd) Early childhood education and care services
Include a wide range of part-day, full-school-day, full-work-day programs under education, health, and social welfare auspices.
Are funded and delivered in a variety of ways in both the public and the private sectors.
Are voluntary and take-up is high where the programs are free or the fees are very modest, and the quality adequate.
28. Families & Family Policies 28 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package Early childhood education and care services (ECEC)
Acknowledged in Hong Kong too, as essential foundation for child development
Current stress on:
Improving quality,
Enhancing staff qualifications, and
Strengthening the links between preschool and primary school.
29. Families & Family Policies 29 Possible Components of a Family Policy Package (contd) Early childhood education and care services:
Almost universal coverage for 3- to 6- year olds but largely part-day
Unclear how care is provided for the rest of the working day.
Inadequate data regarding infant and toddler care.
30. Families & Family Policies 30 Conclusions Difficult to obtain a coherent picture of what is provided to enhance the wellbeing of Hong Kong children and their families, with what consequences.
Among initiatives mentioned are:
Family commission,
Family advisory council,
Family impact analyses and reports, and
Family-friendly policies.
Biggest gap is a holistic picture of the situation of the children and the policies designed to respond to their needs and problems.
31. Families & Family Policies 31 Conclusions (contd) Family policy is a holistic approach to evaluating social policies affecting children and their families.
A holistic approach to developing a coherent policy agenda remains to be developed in Hong Kong.
Even without that it would be useful to make the policy package that exists more visible.
32. Families & Family Policies 32 Conclusions No one policy can achieve all the desired goals:
Reducing child policy,
Increasing capital investment,
Protecting childrens rights,
Strengthening families, and
Enhancing child development and well-being.
An explicit family policy may not be the answer but making the condition of children and their families more visible and assessing the policies affecting them would help if the goal is to achieve greater coherence.