Berliner Boersenzeitung - Debate in Spain over 'menstrual leave' plan

EUR -
AED 4.099752
AFN 76.858154
ALL 99.118656
AMD 432.12738
ANG 2.008439
AOA 1035.548825
ARS 1074.497259
AUD 1.640989
AWG 2.009108
AZN 1.899379
BAM 1.953212
BBD 2.250118
BDT 133.173529
BGN 1.953212
BHD 0.419944
BIF 3230.619048
BMD 1.116171
BND 1.439992
BOB 7.700796
BRL 6.155797
BSD 1.114423
BTN 93.143274
BWP 14.731479
BYN 3.647067
BYR 21876.950459
BZD 2.246323
CAD 1.513796
CDF 3204.527169
CHF 0.949086
CLF 0.037555
CLP 1036.256837
CNY 7.871128
CNH 7.865791
COP 4636.556016
CRC 578.233772
CUC 1.116171
CUP 29.57853
CVE 110.119079
CZK 25.067526
DJF 198.447034
DKK 7.458479
DOP 66.891361
DZD 147.489559
EGP 54.161295
ERN 16.742564
ETB 129.319536
FJD 2.456469
FKP 0.85003
GBP 0.83836
GEL 3.047089
GGP 0.85003
GHS 17.519784
GIP 0.85003
GMD 76.452423
GNF 9628.241444
GTQ 8.614585
GYD 233.131074
HKD 8.695078
HNL 27.644368
HRK 7.588859
HTG 147.045148
HUF 393.1478
IDR 16922.044414
ILS 4.216352
IMP 0.85003
INR 93.178453
IQD 1459.865506
IRR 46982.426562
ISK 152.089775
JEP 0.85003
JMD 175.087988
JOD 0.790807
JPY 160.644914
KES 143.759502
KGS 94.02457
KHR 4526.002513
KMF 492.622239
KPW 1004.553215
KRW 1487.286814
KWD 0.34051
KYD 0.928669
KZT 534.301987
LAK 24608.390978
LBP 99796.557783
LKR 340.009447
LRD 222.884652
LSL 19.563975
LTL 3.295762
LVL 0.675161
LYD 5.291987
MAD 10.805881
MDL 19.446231
MGA 5040.32098
MKD 61.533461
MMK 3625.27968
MNT 3792.74881
MOP 8.945546
MRU 44.287314
MUR 51.209703
MVR 17.144229
MWK 1932.239555
MXN 21.672474
MYR 4.69348
MZN 71.267159
NAD 19.563975
NGN 1829.906495
NIO 41.015649
NOK 11.700149
NPR 149.029518
NZD 1.789926
OMR 0.429181
PAB 1.114423
PEN 4.177065
PGK 4.36222
PHP 62.118251
PKR 309.642487
PLN 4.269866
PYG 8694.47879
QAR 4.062916
RON 4.966845
RSD 116.932051
RUB 103.369526
RWF 1502.309263
SAR 4.188378
SBD 9.271962
SCR 14.561704
SDG 671.378835
SEK 11.35671
SGD 1.441602
SHP 0.85003
SLE 25.501495
SLL 23405.540824
SOS 636.856091
SRD 33.713991
STD 23102.484955
SVC 9.751079
SYP 2804.412905
SZL 19.571066
THB 36.752157
TJS 11.846302
TMT 3.906598
TND 3.376725
TOP 2.614181
TRY 38.09338
TTD 7.579956
TWD 35.696295
TZS 3042.368503
UAH 46.061863
UGX 4128.529212
USD 1.116171
UYU 46.04898
UZS 14181.208225
VEF 4043387.873994
VES 41.05027
VND 27463.386022
VUV 132.514057
WST 3.122447
XAF 655.08893
XAG 0.03584
XAU 0.000426
XCD 3.016507
XDR 0.825906
XOF 655.08893
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.405526
ZAR 19.404241
ZMK 10046.873476
ZMW 29.503904
ZWL 359.406588
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    25.02

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    69.55

    +1.04%

  • BCC

    -7.1900

    137.5

    -5.23%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.99

    -0.29%

  • RBGPF

    58.8300

    58.83

    +100%

  • BCE

    -0.1500

    35.04

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.8200

    40.8

    -2.01%

  • RIO

    -1.6100

    63.57

    -2.53%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    25.15

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    -0.3900

    12.92

    -3.02%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    37.44

    -0.35%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.97

    +0.29%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.01

    -0.5%

  • AZN

    -0.5200

    78.38

    -0.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.32

    -0.6%

  • BP

    -0.1200

    32.64

    -0.37%

Debate in Spain over 'menstrual leave' plan
Debate in Spain over 'menstrual leave' plan / Photo: PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU - AFP

Debate in Spain over 'menstrual leave' plan

Spain's plan to become the first European nation to allow women to take "menstrual leave" from work has sparked a debate that has split the country's leftist coalition government and unions.

Text size:

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez's government is expected to include the menstrual leave as part of a draft bill on reproductive health that is set to be approved at a cabinet meeting on Tuesday.

"We will recognise in the law the right to leave for women who have painful periods that will be financed by the state," Equality Minister Irene Montero tweeted Friday.

She belongs to far-left party Podemos, Sanchez's junior coalition partners.

The proposed law would introduce at least three days' sick pay each month for women who suffer from severe period pains, daily newspaper El Pais and other media which have seen the draft bill reported.

The work leave could be extended to five days for women with particularly disabling periods if they have a medical certificate, the reports said.

"There are women who cannot work and live normally because they have really painful periods," Montero said.

Menstrual leave is currently offered only in a small number of countries including South Korea and Indonesia, none of them in Europe.

But the issue is proving controversial in Spain with some politicians and unions saying it could stigmatise women in the workplace and favour the recruitment of men.

"You have to be careful with this type of decision," said Cristina Antonanzas, deputy secretary of one of trade union UGT, adding this could indirectly impact "women's access to the labour market".

But Spain's other major trade union, the CCOO, welcomed the proposed measure and called it a major "legislative advance" that will recognise a health problem that has been "ignored" until now.

Economy Minister Nadia Calvino, a former general director for budget at the European Commission who belongs to the Socialist party, said work was being done on several drafts.

"The government will never adopt a measure that stigmatises women," she told reporters on Thursday when asked about the controversy.

- Abortion reform -

The head of the main opposition conservative Popular Party (PP), Alberto Nunez Feijoo, said it was up to doctors to decide when sick leave is warranted.

He accused the government of seeking to distract attention from a mobile phone spying scandal with the measure.

Ana Ferrer, of the Association of Victims of Endometriosis, a condition which can lead to more severe menstrual symptoms, said she feared the measure of will lead to "discrimination" against women even though it intends to protect their rights.

"What we need, more than leave, is recognition of our disability," she told AFP.

The draft bill reproductive health also calls for the elimination of the value-added tax (VAT) on some feminine sanitary products such as tampons.

It will also include measures to boost access to abortion at private hospitals and change the law to allow minors of 16 and 17 to terminate a pregnancy without their parents' consent.

Spain decriminalised abortion in 1985 in cases of rape, if a foetus is malformed or if a birth poses a serious physical or psychological risk to the mother.

The scope of the law was broadened in 2010 to allow abortion on demand in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy but access to the procedure is complicated by the fact that many doctors in public hospitals refuse to perform abortions.

(P.Werner--BBZ)