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Geopolitics & PoliticsTuesday, July 7, 2026

Berlin Moves to Trim Parental Leave as Moscow and Tehran Grapple with Child Welfare

A German draft law would cut paid parental leave by two months while Russia proposes shorter workweeks for parents, as studies from Sweden and Iran warn of declining adult engagement in children’s reading and care.

The German government is advancing a reform that would reduce the maximum duration of parental allowance from 14 to 12 months, reserving three months for each parent and leaving six to be shared flexibly. The draft, confirmed by the family ministry but still under inter-ministerial review, would also raise the minimum monthly payment from €300 to €330 and the cap from €1,800 to €1,900. According to ministry figures cited in the proposal, the changes are designed to save around €500 million annually while creating stronger incentives for fathers to take solo care leave, a move the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung describes as economically efficient and aligned with efforts to shorten mothers’ career interruptions.

Opposition parties in Berlin have sharply criticised the plan. The Left’s parliamentary leader, Heidi Reichinnek, called the logic “completely absurd,” arguing that a modest increase in monthly sums cannot compensate for the loss of two months of support, especially as the period no longer covers the typical daycare settling-in phase. The Greens’ deputy parliamentary leader, Misbah Khan, warned that if a partner does not take the three reserved months, mothers would be left without full coverage for the child’s first year, increasing financial dependency and disrupting employment histories. The German Women’s Council has separately flagged that the family ministry’s overall budget is set to shrink by up to a fifth by 2029, with the popular parental allowance bearing a disproportionate share of cuts.

Viewed from Moscow, the policy direction is markedly different. A bill introduced in the State Duma by 13 deputies, including Leonid Slutsky and Boris Chernyshov, would expand labour guarantees for working parents of minors. The proposal would cut the standard workweek from 40 to 39 hours without loss of pay and grant parents of two or more children four additional paid days off per year. The explanatory note frames the measure as a tool to strengthen the family, improve demographic resilience, and ease the burden of combining work with child-rearing. A separate, earlier bill sought a 30-hour week for one parent in large families, though it has not advanced since February.

Beyond fiscal and labour policy, parallel debates in Sweden and Iran highlight the non-material dimensions of parental involvement. A report by the Swedish Teachers’ Foundation shows that while eight in ten parents read aloud to young children daily or several times a week, the practice drops sharply after age four, with time pressure and fatigue cited as main obstacles. Commentators in Smålandsposten note that many Swedish parents, accustomed to only around three hours of daily contact with their children during the working year, experience school holidays as a shock, a dynamic they link to the near-universal enrolment of toddlers in preschool. In Iran, an analysis of over 23 million reading comprehension tests by the educational technology firm Renaissance reveals that most teenage boys in Britain and Ireland are stuck reading primary-level books, with eight of the ten most-read titles among 11- to 14-year-old boys coming from the heavily illustrated “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” series. Iranian media, citing the study, point to smartphone addiction and AI chatbot summaries as factors eroding attention spans and pushing adolescents away from challenging texts.

The German draft law is expected to undergo further coordination within the government before being submitted to parliament. The Russian labour bill has been introduced in the Duma but has not yet been scheduled for a first reading. The Swedish and Iranian findings are feeding into ongoing public and policy discussions about how states and societies can sustain the adult presence that child development research consistently identifies as critical.

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7 outlets|4 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Berlin Moves to Trim Parental Leave as Moscow and Tehran Grapple with Child Welfare

A German draft law would cut paid parental leave by two months while Russia proposes shorter workweeks for parents, as studies from Sweden and Iran warn of declining adult engagement in children’s reading and care.

The German government is advancing a reform that would reduce the maximum duration of parental allowance from 14 to 12 months, reserving three months for each parent and leaving six to be shared flexibly. The draft, confirmed by the family ministry but still under inter-ministerial review, would also raise the minimum monthly payment from €300 to €330 and the cap from €1,800 to €1,900. According to ministry figures cited in the proposal, the changes are designed to save around €500 million annually while creating stronger incentives for fathers to take solo care leave, a move the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung describes as economically efficient and aligned with efforts to shorten mothers’ career interruptions.

Opposition parties in Berlin have sharply criticised the plan. The Left’s parliamentary leader, Heidi Reichinnek, called the logic “completely absurd,” arguing that a modest increase in monthly sums cannot compensate for the loss of two months of support, especially as the period no longer covers the typical daycare settling-in phase. The Greens’ deputy parliamentary leader, Misbah Khan, warned that if a partner does not take the three reserved months, mothers would be left without full coverage for the child’s first year, increasing financial dependency and disrupting employment histories. The German Women’s Council has separately flagged that the family ministry’s overall budget is set to shrink by up to a fifth by 2029, with the popular parental allowance bearing a disproportionate share of cuts.

Viewed from Moscow, the policy direction is markedly different. A bill introduced in the State Duma by 13 deputies, including Leonid Slutsky and Boris Chernyshov, would expand labour guarantees for working parents of minors. The proposal would cut the standard workweek from 40 to 39 hours without loss of pay and grant parents of two or more children four additional paid days off per year. The explanatory note frames the measure as a tool to strengthen the family, improve demographic resilience, and ease the burden of combining work with child-rearing. A separate, earlier bill sought a 30-hour week for one parent in large families, though it has not advanced since February.

Beyond fiscal and labour policy, parallel debates in Sweden and Iran highlight the non-material dimensions of parental involvement. A report by the Swedish Teachers’ Foundation shows that while eight in ten parents read aloud to young children daily or several times a week, the practice drops sharply after age four, with time pressure and fatigue cited as main obstacles. Commentators in Smålandsposten note that many Swedish parents, accustomed to only around three hours of daily contact with their children during the working year, experience school holidays as a shock, a dynamic they link to the near-universal enrolment of toddlers in preschool. In Iran, an analysis of over 23 million reading comprehension tests by the educational technology firm Renaissance reveals that most teenage boys in Britain and Ireland are stuck reading primary-level books, with eight of the ten most-read titles among 11- to 14-year-old boys coming from the heavily illustrated “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” series. Iranian media, citing the study, point to smartphone addiction and AI chatbot summaries as factors eroding attention spans and pushing adolescents away from challenging texts.

The German draft law is expected to undergo further coordination within the government before being submitted to parliament. The Russian labour bill has been introduced in the Duma but has not yet been scheduled for a first reading. The Swedish and Iranian findings are feeding into ongoing public and policy discussions about how states and societies can sustain the adult presence that child development research consistently identifies as critical.

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