employment research
Background
Over one thousand single parents completed our survey on single parents access to work and career progression. We conducted follow up case studies with five single parents. Our report summarising the findings and outlining our key recommendations is available to download here.
Key Findings
Almost 90% of single parents report a lack of flexible working and affordable childcare as key barriers to entering the workforce
Single parents are pushed into part-time work because of a lack of affordable childcare and lack of flexible roles
Single parents working part-time face greater challenges in employment than those working full-time
Single parents with majority care for their children receive less support than those who have less level of care for their children
Recommendations
Single parents require a supportive ecosystem which enables them to access paid work and progress to a level which best suits their skills and experiences. This requires government and employers coming together to implement the following changes:
Flexible working opportunities
Flexible working opportunities must be available at all levels
Part-time employees must be given appropriate support and offered the same opportunities as full-time staff
Childcare infrastructure
Provide affordable and accessible childcare for all single parent families
Raise the limit for childcare support under Universal Credit to reflect the real cost of childcare with up to 100% of costs refundable depending on individual earnings
Better support the burden of childcare costs on high earning single parent families
Social Security
Ensure the benefits system is understood by those in receipt of benefits
Consider the additional costs of working in benefit rates to ensure that “work pays”
Provide unemployed single parents with dedicated Job Centre support
Employers
Implement single parent inclusive HR policies (see appendix 2 for a comprehensive list)
Incorporate single parents in organisational Diversity and Inclusion strategies
Train managers on single parent support and inclusion
Ensure professional development opportunities and wellbeing support consider the availability of single parents
Have blended options for conferences/ training/ events so there is always an online option available
Legal rights
Add single parents to the Equality Act to protect them from discrimination
Double parental leave rights for single parents[1]
Further Research
Explore how different types of single parents are treated and their specific needs (e.g. sole carers, co-parents etc).
Investigate the cost to the economy of single parent exclusion and discrimination within the workplace
[1] Currently each parent is entitled to 18 weeks of unpaid parental leave per child before they turn 18 https://www.gov.uk/parental-leave/entitlement
Read the report
You can download our full report (printer friendly version also available) or the summary version below.
Press Release
You can download our press release on our employment report below.
VIEWS FROM SINGLE PARENTS
Below are comments single parents made during our research about their own experiences.
childcare
“I have had to borrow money from friends to pay for childcare up front and it left us with next to nothing to spend during the holidays, it felt like my children and I were being punished for me being a single parent.”
“The profession I am trained to do (Midwifery) requires shift working, including nights, which is impossible to find childcare for as a solo parent with no family support.”
“Childcare costs in the school holidays are just over £90 per day for both of my children combined, which is more than I earn in a day.”
attitudes towards single parents
“I worked with an almost all male team, who either had older children or no children, and I felt like I was totally unreliable, stressed out all the time, I would feel like a failure”
“Understanding an individual’s circumstances, valuing them for the different perspective they can bring to the table is such an important part, and my experiences as a single mum should be championed, not seen as a downfall. I very rarely sleep through the night, I have nursery drop off and pick up, work, bedtime, house and garden chores, I feel like some of my colleagues would simply crumble doing my schedule for longer than a week.”
flexible work
“Once I became a single parent my career was over, I had no choice to look for and apply for anything that suited my available hours rather that my qualifications, knowledge and skills.”
“It’s not that us single parents lack skill or ambition, but rather that we lack support and opportunity!”
“trying to get another job as a single parent was absolutely impossible. There was NO flexible or part time or job share opportunities and no employer would even consider it”
promotion and professional development
“Working single parents haven’t got time to spend raising their profile. If they do a good job they should be just as eligible and visible for promotions.”
“Not enough paid study time is given even though the workplace benefits from our further development and limits us if we don't.”
“The business only ever wants their needs met, they may accommodate parents with flexibility but this comes at a cost of sacrificing their career because managers do not want to promote, or give opportunities to individuals whose priorities are not solely on the business.”
“A manager within my company told me not to try to ‘have it all’ regarding being a solo mum and wanting to progress professionally.”
single parentism
“A number of development opportunities have been denied to me since being widowed which were previously offered to me when my husband was alive”
“there is an undercurrent of concern that I won’t be able to do the job (i.e. put in extra hours) because I am a single parent”
“I think we are easy targets for bullying”
“People instantly assume I can’t do things, and often will make the decision for me. I also feel I have to work harder as a single parent to prove myself than my counterpart in a different circumstance.”
“I have been penalised at my employer for being unmarried as I would receive extra death in service benefit if I was married than I do because I am unmarried.”
“I was told it was either my job or my children.”
SINGLE DADS
“I believe it is even more challenging as a man because of the preconceptions of people. No one expects a man to have such big responsibilities of children.”
“All professionals and general people assume that the mum is the main carer. Many are shocked and surprised that I do 50% of the childcare.”
work-life balance
“single parents never get a break. The children come first, work comes second, and a very distant third is yourself”
“it's a constant juggle, constant stress, and constant heavy load of responsibility that is resting solely on one pair of shoulders.”
“To have zero time to yourself or downtime day in, day out - especially whilst being under additional strain from juggling childcare during a pandemic - has a very negative effect on physical and mental health very quickly.”