8. Looking to the future
Among the instruments adopted at the First Session of the
International Labour Conference was the Convention concerning the employment of
women before and after childbirth, 1919 (No. 3). Convention No. 3 laid out the
basic principles of maternity protection: the right to leave, the right to
medical benefits and the right to income replacement during leave. Leave was to
be provided up to six weeks before confinement upon production of a medical
certificate and was mandatory for the six weeks following confinement. Medical
benefits were to include free attendance by a doctor or certified midwife. Cash
benefits were to be sufficient for the full and healthy maintenance of mother
and child, the exact amount being determined by the competent authority in each
country. Benefits were to be provided either out of public funds or by means of
a system of insurance. The right to leave was reinforced by the explicit
prohibition of dismissal during a womans absence on maternity leave or at
such time that the notice would expire during such absence.
The Maternity Protection Convention (Revised), 1952 (No. 103),
retained the same principal elements of protection, i.e. the right to maternity
leave, medical care and cash benefits, but the means and manner of providing
these benefits were made more explicit. The 12-week minimum leave period was to
include a period of mandatory postnatal leave of at least six weeks. Additional
leave was to be provided before or after confinement in the event of medically
certified illness arising out of pregnancy or confinement. Medical benefits were
to include prenatal, confinement and postnatal care by qualified midwives or
medical practitioners, as well as hospitalization if necessary. Freedom of
choice of doctor and of public or private hospital were to be respected. As
regards cash benefits, a minimum income replacement rate of two-thirds of the
womans previous earnings was specified for those benefits derived from
social insurance. Payroll taxes were to be paid on the basis of the total number
of workers employed without distinction of sex. The principle of non-liability
of the employer was made explicit. The prohibition of dismissal during a
womans absence on maternity leave was retained, but not further
strengthened.
Neither Convention No. 3 nor No. 103 has obtained a significant
number of ratifications. Only 33 member States have ratified Convention No. 3,
which remains open to ratification; 36 have ratified No. 103. Of these, 16
member States have ratified both instruments, bringing the total number of
countries to have ratified to 53.
The preceding review of national law and practice has
demonstrated that maternity protection is as high a priority for individual
member States as it is for the Organization as a whole. The scope of protection
is gradually being extended, although coverage is still not universal in many
countries. Leave provisions often exceed the 12 weeks stipulated in Convention
No. 103. Almost all member States have special measures to protect the health
and safety of pregnant women and nursing mothers at the workplace, but
approaches to protection vary widely from generalized gender-based prohibitions
to the adaptation of working conditions according to individual needs. Parental
leave arrangements in some countries provide encouragement to the sharing of
child-rearing responsibilities between father and mother, but when such leave is
taken predominantly by women, it may simply extend their absence from the
workplace following childbirth. Employment is protected to varying degrees in
many member States, though nowhere has discrimination on the basis of maternity
been entirely eliminated.
In important ways, however, member States diverge in law and
practice from the provisions of Convention No. 103. A large number of women
remain unprotected due to sectoral or occupational exclusions, such as
agricultural or domestic workers, for example. Cash benefits at some level are
granted in most countries, in some through social insurance or public funds, in
others directly by employers, and sometimes through mixed systems. It will be
recalled that Convention No. 103 explicitly prohibits employer liability for the
payment of benefits. Medical benefits in many countries are provided
predominantly through public health or social security institutions, in which
case individual choice of doctor and hospital may be limited. In some countries,
employers bear the cost of medical care.
As evidenced in this report, laws designed to protect the health
of mother and child and the employment rights of working women figure
prominently in the legislation of almost every ILO member State examined. Yet
many countries find it difficult to ratify highly prescriptive instruments. It
has been found in the past that member States whose law and practice are in
conformity with the essential provisions of an international instrument are
sometimes unable to ratify or accept that instrument formally by reason of
comparatively minor divergences between its precise terms and their national law
and practice. These divergences may relate to the scope of the instrument or to
details of application of the basic principles.
A spirit of realism must therefore imbue the provisions of any
new Convention, if it is to meet the needs and expectations of most, if not all,
ILO member States. A focus on commonly held principles, coupled with sufficient
possibilities for governments and the social partners to work together to
achieve goals in accordance with national conditions, may prove an effective
means of ensuring safe motherhood and equitable employment conditions for
working women.
The questionnaire has been devised with these considerations in
mind. The fundamental protections on which wide international consensus has
developed over the years, namely the right to leave, medical benefits and income
replacement, may form the main content of the possible Convention. With regard
to length of leave, the questionnaire raises the possibility of a dynamic
approach, setting 12 weeks of leave as the minimum standard - a target already
achieved by a large number of member States - but also providing for periodic
national tripartite consultations to examine the possibility of extending the
period of leave. Such an approach would provide encouragement for those who are
able to surpass current provisions to do so.
A similarly dynamic approach may be possible with regard to cash
benefits. Their main purpose - the full and healthy maintenance of mother and
child in accordance with a suitable standard of living - is retained from
Convention No. 103, but some flexibility in achieving this goal is possible in
two important ways. First, the question is raised as to the standard rate of
income replacement, i.e. whether it should be at the rate of two-thirds of a
womans previous earnings or of the amount taken into account for computing
benefits or, alternatively, at a flat rate of an appropriate amount. Once again,
periodic national tripartite consultations might examine the possibility of
increasing the amount or rate of benefits. The possibility is also raised of
permitting ratification of the Convention by a Member which provides cash
benefits at a lower rate if (a) that Members economy and social security
system are insufficiently developed, and (b) if that Member provides maternity
cash benefits at a rate no lower than those payable for sickness or temporary
disability in accordance with national law and practice. In that event, the
Member would describe in its reports on the application of the Convention the
measures taken with a view to raising that rate. The second element of
flexibility regards the means of financing cash benefits. This question is
raised in the section of the questionnaire relating to the content of a possible
Recommendation, with a view to allowing for variations in law and practice in
this regard. The questionnaire raises the possibility of financing (a) through
compulsory social insurance, (b) through public funds, and (c) in a manner
determined by national law and practice.
A further question related to the content of a Convention raises
the possibility of strengthening employment rights to guard against unfair
dismissal and to ensure the right to return to work after leave. Access to
employment-related protections, such as leave and medical and cash benefits,
might thereby be secured.
Questions regarding the content of a possible Recommendation
cover a number of the issues raised in this report where national law and
practice vary widely, but where consensus might be achieved in terms of setting
desirable targets. These relate to the length, distribution and possible
extensions of leave; the level and extent of benefits; the financing of
benefits; employment protection; health protection; provisions for nursing
mothers; and related types of leave.
Members are invited in their replies to indicate any provision
regarding the possible content of either a Convention or a Recommendation which
they would prefer to include in the other instrument. Members are further
invited to indicate any particularities of national law and practice with regard
to maternity protection which, in their view, are liable to create difficulties
in the implementation of an international instrument and to make specific
suggestions as to how these difficulties might be
overcome.