With all
the Euro trouble, endless political strife around Europe and with Germany
holding the money bag you would imagine there are a great many pressing
problems for Germany to work on.
Austerity
and economic disciplines not known for a generation and more are being visited
on populations who have become unused to them.
The Germans are the key to all this and will expect reductions and
sacrifices.
But it
appears that something is more important than all this and might have a
priority, notably with elections pending.
Bear in
mind what Germany does
today, Europe does tomorrow and the UK will have to follow. Although in the UK we can safely assume we will
make it much more complicated and expensive than the others.
It is that
the German government is thinking of improving the terms of maternity leave for
the parents (however defined) but adding to that to create the rights of
grandparents for time off and assistance.
The title
is taken from the Laurie Lee book, “Cider With Rosie”, see Wikipedia for an
explanation. Our ideas about grannies
and their like seem to have changed.
But these
extra rights and benefits are being proposed by a governing class who tend to
have breeding patterns of their own.
Largely, these mean delaying breeding until a later age than many,
limiting the numbers and being in public sector or related employment.
There could
be some unintended consequences here, never mind one of those all too familiar
“time bombs” that go off under a later generation or financial situation.
There is
the obvious arithmetic that for one mewling infant, it can be is up to six people including the grandparents, all taking time off and the rest. Has anyone worked out the costs and the
implications?
The other
is that in our divergent communities there are a good many groups where
breeding begins early, the numbers born are greater and people can be
grandparents in their thirties. Indeed
some may be great grandparents even during their theoretical “working age”.
A child
will have eight great grandparents, assuming that incest or closely interwoven
families are not involved. Why shouldn’t
great grandparents, who are employed not have the same rights as grandparents?
So if
maternity leave and the rest no longer apply solely to the mother, but has been
extended to fathers, if it goes up a generation or two, doubling the potential
liabilities in many of each generation where will it all lead to.
How do you
manage a work place or efficient organisation where the staff of every age
group has become entitled to significant periods of time off, job protection
and benefits that are unpredictable?
How does a
nation who hands out these benefits compete with those that do not?
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