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EMPLOYER STUDY FROM FAMILIES AND WORK INSTITUTE
SHOWS SIGNIFICANT CHANGES FOR U.S. WORKERS SINCE 1998
2008 National Study of Employers follows ten years trends related to
U.S. workplace policies and benefits
http://familiesandwork.org/site/newsroom/releases/2008nse.html
Download: 2008nse.pdf
New York , NY, May 21, 2008 The latest edition of a study of
U.S. workplaces finds that employers with more women and more
minorities in top positions, and nonprofits organizations, are more
likely to offer flexible workplaces. These are just two of the
significant findings to emerge from the landmark 2008 National Study
of Employers (NSE), released today by Families and Work Institute (
www.familiesandwork.org).
...
First conducted in 1998, the 2008 NSE is the most comprehensive and
far-reaching study of initiatives provided by U.S. employers to
address the changing needs of today’s workforce. Designed by
Families and Work Institute and conducted by Harris Interactive,
Inc., the NSE interviewed 1,100 employers with 50 or more employees
located throughout the United States and provides trend data on
changes that have occurred over the past 10 years. The study
addresses questions such as:
* What is the prevalence of programs, policies, and benefits
that address the needs of the changing workforce, including
workplace flexibility, caregiving leaves, child and elder care
assistance, and health care/economic security benefits?
* Are smaller or larger employers more likely to provide these
programs, policies, and benefits?
* Have these initiatives increased or decreased in the past ten
years?
* Which employers provider higher levels of support to their
employees?
“There has been surprising stability in many of the practices,
policies and programs of U.S. employers over the past 10 years,”
said Ellen Galinsky, president and founder of Families and Work
Institute and lead author of the study. “The NSE confirms that in
the face of economic volatility companies have generally held steady
or reduced benefits that carry hard costs. Yet in certain areas
including domestic partner benefits and access to information on
support services we are seeing an expansion of benefits. We find
it particularly interesting that having an employee base composed of
a greater percentage of women, or the presence of women and
minorities in senior positions, is correlated with a more flexible
workplace.”
A sampling of changes in the workplace over the past 10 years
identified by the 2008 National Study of Employers includes:
On the Rise
* Flexibility: 79% of employers now allow at least
some employees to periodically change their arrival and departure
time, up from 68% in 1998.
The 2008 study shows that 53% of organizations with 50 or more
employees allow some employees to phase into retirement by working
reduced hours over a period of time prior to full retirement and 38%
allow some employees to take sabbaticals (paid or unpaid leaves of
six months or more) and return to a comparable job.
* Elder care: Thirty-nine percent of employers today
provide access to information about services for elderly family
members compared with 23% in 1998.
* Employee Assistance Programs : 65% of employers provide
EAPs today, up from 56% in 1998.
* Wellness: Sixty percent of employers provide Wellness
Programs today compared to 56% in 1998.
* Maternal Benefits : More employers are providing
private space for breastfeeding women in 2008 (53%) than in 1998
(37%).
* Domestic Partners: Employers are more likely to provide
health insurance for unmarried partners of employees—31% in 2008,
compared with 14% ten years ago.
On the Decline
* Flexibility: 47% of employers today allow at least
some employees to move from full-time to part-time work and back
again while remaining in the same position or level, down from 57%
in 1998.
* Maternal Benefits: Far fewer employers provide full pay
during the period of maternity-related disability, today at 16%,
down from 27% in 1998.
* Health care Premiums: Only 4% of employers pay all of
the premiums for family members today, compared with 13% in 1998.
Overall, 35% of employers report increasing employees’
premium co-pays for individual and family health care coverage in
the past 12 months.
* Pension & Retirement Plans: 29% offer defined pension
plans in 2008 compared with 48% in 1998. Employers are also less
likely to contribute to employees’ retirement plans.
Twenty-nine percent of employers in 2008 provide
defined-benefit pension plans, down from 48% in 1998.
Employers in 2008 are less likely (81%) than employers in 1998
(91%) to make contributions to employees’ retirement plans.
The report includes interesting findings related to the Family
Medical Leave Act (FMLA): 22% of employers offer more than the 12
weeks of mandated maternity leave, yet 18 to 21% of all employers
surveyed appear to be out of compliance with FMLA.
The NSE is funded by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation...
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