| Good morning and thank you for
inviting me. I am particularly pleased to be here today as yesterday we
introduced the Work and Families Bill into Parliament, so today could
hardly be more timely. The Bill will provide further rights and advantages
to hard working families in Britain and demonstrates this Government’s
commitment to the family.
We are committed to raising productivity and
delivering prosperity for all but this can only be done by maximising
potential in the workplace.
We have come a long way in the last few decades. I
can all too easily remember, and not so long ago either, when businesses
could refuse to employ someone just because they had children.
At that time even the civil service, which is
considered by some to have better working conditions than some private
sector counterparts, could ask a women to resign just because they were
getting married or when they became pregnant.
As I say we have come a long way, but there can
still be in some quarters an expectation that women should stay at home.
So there is no room for complacency and there is still much more that can
be done to assist working families and to maximise potential at work.
Supporting families by enabling them to balance
their work and caring commitments is not just important for the
individuals and our future society; it makes good business sense too.
This is because the greater the provision of
flexible working, the more choice employers have in recruiting and
retaining the best staff.
Last month, we launched a report called ‘Managing
Change – Practical Ways to Reduce Long Hours and Reform Working
Practices’. This was produced in association with both the TUC and CBI.
The report shows the diverse and creative ways
flexible working is used in different organisations. This includes
job-sharing, annualised hours and working from home often drawing on a
variety of technology to deliver improved services to customers.
The case studies demonstrate that when used
effectively, these approaches have and continue to bring very real
benefits to individuals but also a real competitive advantage to the
organisation as a whole.
Caroline Walters from BT, which was one of the
case studies featured in this report, will be sharing her experience of
flexible working a little later in this conference, so I will leave it for
her to expand on what can be achieved with a little creativity.
Our approach to increasing flexible working
opportunities is two-pronged. The key element is about actively promoting
the benefits of work-life balance to business.
The second is focused on targeted and light-touch
legislation. We believe the majority of businesses recognise the benefits
of flexible working and that it benefits the bottom line. But a safety net
of legislation is required to protect those employees who do not benefit
from working for progressive employers.
The right to request flexible working was
introduced in 2003 and has been a tremendous success. It has helped many
parents change their working patterns and got businesses to focus on how
work can be better organised.
Almost a quarter of employees with children under
six have requested to work flexibly in the last two years. And only around
10% of flexible working requests are now being declined – compared to 20%
before the law was introduced.
This success is due to the law's targeted rather
than blanket approach. This has enabled organisations to grow flexible
working at a pace they can manage.
Indeed many organisations are opening up
opportunities for flexible working to more of their employees – not just
those covered by the law.
Since we introduced this right we have been
monitoring and evaluating its impact. We plan to publish a range of
evidence next spring which will act as a useful baseline and ensure that
any further support is targeted where it is most needed.
The Working Families research that Professor Cary
Cooper is presenting today will be another important part of this evidence
base.
The DTI is also publishing a report today, which
examines flexible and family friendly work practices in small businesses
in the service sector. One of the key messages is that the majority of
small employers are committed and able to address work-life balance
issues.
Perhaps, unsurprisingly, the study found that
small employers say flexible working is intrinsically part of their
culture. The fact that they are small means they are in tune with their
employee’s needs and adjust to these needs when they can. Many small
companies have also found that this flexibility can also be popular with
their customers.
This finding is consistent with the CBI’s recent
survey, which showed that the smallest employers are least likely to
refuse a request to work flexibly.
Small firms recognise that offering flexibility
enables them to retain their best employees and so brings business
benefits. However, the study also suggests that more can be done by small
firms to maximise the potential benefits for their businesses, such as
using flexible working as part of a recruitment or employee commitment
strategy. This is where guidance and we as a Government have an important
role to play.
This is why we have produced a range of support for businesses drawing
from a wide diversity of sources. In addition to published guidance,
Business Link and ACAS provide tailored assistance to help businesses
manage their employees requests to work flexibly.
Earlier this year Acas added a free online training module on the right to
request to supplement their existing services.
It is important for employers that they are aware of all the guidance and
help that is out there. I know that Working Families have an excellent
selection of pages on their website specifically to help smaller employers
maximise flexible working opportunities and I am pleased to promote this.
So what are the next steps that we are taking to
help working families?
As many of you will know, following publication of
our Ten Year Strategy for Childcare, we recently consulted on proposals to
provide more choice for families in how they balance work and caring
responsibilities.
The principles behind these proposals are to:
ensure every child has the best possible start in life; respond to
changing patterns of employment and ensure that parents and others with
caring responsibilities can work and progress their careers; enable all
families to have genuine choices about how they balance work and family
life.
We consulted extensively on these proposals,
drawing on earlier consultations with stakeholders including a Citizens’
Jury and a series of Roundtables. We spoke to businesses both large and
small, parent groups, unions, academics and I’m sure many of you here
today will have taken the opportunity to help shape these proposals.
What came out clearly was the desire to give
children the best start in life or support elderly or sick relatives in
the best way possible.
As we developed these proposals we were clear that
we wanted to establish a balanced framework of rights and responsibilities
for both employers and employees. So whilst providing enhanced choice and
entitlements for the individual – we also wanted to minimise burdens on
business.
There has been much speculation about what plans
we have. I can say that we have been looking carefully at a range of
options to try and understand the impact and implications of any measures
intorduced. For example –
Can we do something more creative around leave
which can facilitate greater sharing of childcare between men and women?
How can we better support those caring for adults?
What would be the impact of extending the scope of
the flexible working legislation to parents with older children and carers
of adults?
Is there more support and guidance that Government
could provide to facilitate the spread of flexible working?
We have already signalled our intention to extend
the flexible working law to carers, as we want these people to have more
choice to enable them to balance work and their caring roles.
Their needs are especially complex – even when
compared to parents – and there is more we should do to understand how
Government and society can support them. We will therefore be consulting
further on the details of this proposal.
Today we are publishing our formal response to the
consultation which will outline all of our proposals in detail. We are
also, as I said earlier, publishing the Work and Families Bill which has
just been introduced into Parliament.
Legislation has its place as I earlier described,
But crucially much of what we want to achieve is cultural. It is about
using the legislation as the foundation in conjunction with disseminating
good practice to steer organisations on to become high performing
workplaces.
We all know families face huge challenges in
balancing their home and work responsibilities. The demands of an
increasingly competitive economy mean that many families often struggle to
balance their caring and working commitments.
The benefits of flexible, family friendly working
practices speak for themselves. In a tight labour market good employers
understand it makes business sense to provide flexible working
opportunities for their staff.
These employers know flexible working arrangements
enable them to raise their staff morale and decrease unplanned
absenteeism, retain skilled staff and reduce recruitment costs. But, most
significantly, it enables them to react to changing market conditions more
effectively.
I am grateful to Working Families for the work
that has gone into today, and the research that they are launching. This
conference provides us all with the opportunity to think about what more
we can all do to exploit the benefits of flexible working.
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