Employment Insurance Policy Brief
Modernizing Maternity and Parental Employment Insurance Benefits: A Policy Brief
Employment Insurance (EI) maternity and parental benefits must be reformed so they can better meet the needs of workers, especially women, now and in the future of work.New parents who take time off to care for their children often experience a significant loss of income. During this time, maternity and parental benefits provided through the federal Employment Insurance (EI) program are critical, particularly for women. They rely on and access these benefits most often. Even today, they make up an overwhelming majority of parental leave benefit claimants at 84.4 percent.
While over the years benefit options have increased, these options cover fewer workers and provide less support for less money than when the EI program was created.
EI maternity and parental benefits are part of decent work for women
The nonprofit sector across Canada consists of an estimated 80 percent of women workers, many of whom are the most marginalized workers in the labour market. ONN’s recent research has found that women in the sector tend to see lower compensation, while very few organizations offer maternity and parental benefit top-ups. As a result, many women workers are particularly hit with a significant loss of income when taking maternity and parental leave. For this reason, ONN is making 5 key recommendations.
Call to action
Read our recommendations and associated cost analysis
Share the policy brief in your networks: put a link to the brief in your newsletters, send this webpage to your networks, post it on social media
Amplify our recommendations in your advocacy work
We’re part of a larger EI modernization movement
The EI program is large and has many moving parts and for this reason many in the movement are advocating for modernization different areas. In our case, it is maternity and parental benefits.
We all agree that the current EI program is not working and a broader review is needed.
Here are some recent reports from partners:
- Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives – Towards and Inclusive Economy: Syncing EI to the Reality of Low-wage work (2019)
- Springboard Policy – Three simple fixes for paid parental leave (2019)
- The Atkinson Foundation – Employment Insurance: Next Steps on the Road to Renewal (2019)
- Adopt4Life, Western University, Adoption Council of Canada – Time to Attach: A National campaign to add 15 weeks of Attachment Leave Employment Insurance Benefits for adoptive parents, kinship and customary caregivers (2019)
- Le Masse – The Employment Insurance Act: A sexist Law in Need of Reform, (2019) (French)
- Institute for Research on Public Policy – Parental benefits in Canada: Which Way Forward? (2017)
- Maytree – Benefits and leaves for parents (2016)