During the 2024 National Day Rally in August, the prime minister announced several planned legislative changes to family leave entitlements. Most notable among these would be a new employer-paid shared parental leave as a distinct entitlement from other family leaves, phased in over two years starting in April 2025 and a doubling of the paternity leave entitlement under the Children Development Co-Savings Act (CDCA). Currently, under the CDCA, mothers may only transfer four of their 16 weeks of government-paid maternity leave to the father.
While these changes should help with work/life balance issues, it’s worth noting that foreign employees (who account for a third of the workforce) are not entitled to CDCA benefits. They instead are covered by the Employment Act (EA), which in terms of family leaves only mandates employer-paid maternity leave (12 weeks for up to two births) and childcare leave (two days per year), the costs of which are not reimbursed by the government. From a policy perspective, the government is planning to increase such benefits to encourage families to have more children. Singapore has one of the lowest fertility rates in the world, at 0.97 births per woman as of 2023 (Singapore Statistics data). Improving minimum family benefits for citizens may increase pressure on employers to offer similar benefits for foreign workers. Currently, few employers surveyed by WTW enhance minimum required paternity and parental leaves (7% and 3% of surveyed companies, respectively).