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Article

English

ID: <

10670/1.9j1npm

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Family Policies in France and Germany: Sisters or Distant Cousins?

Abstract

International audience Welfare state literature almost always positions France and Germany in the same category, that of conservative-corporative regimes. Family policies, in particular, have much in common: both are explicit and generous in terms of taxation system and family allowance schemes. However, France strongly differs from Germany with regard to childcare policy and public support to mothers' employment. France, along with the Scandinavian countries, leads the European Union in public childcare provision. In Germany, despite recent changes, there are still considerable gaps, at least where children under three years of age are concerned and the "male breadwinner/female part-time carer" model is being actively promoted. However there is a growing discordance between the aspirations of young German women with regard to paid work and the norms and values that still govern childcare and caring time policies. Therefore a host of institutional and cultural factors shape the level and terms of mothers' labour force participation in both countries. The impact of motherhood has a stronger effect on employment patterns in Germany than in France. French mothers are more frequently employed on a full-time basis and at the same time have more children than their German counterparts.

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