Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Calling all ladies who work in the City....


I am due to begin maternity leave in August before the birth of my first baby and my current employer, a mid sized bank, only offers the statutory minimum in terms of maternity pay. I would be very interested to hear from anyone who works in the banking/financial sector who is willing to share details of their own employer's policy in the hope that I might be able to discuss an improved package at work.


Feel free to PM me if you would prefer details to remain confidential. I will of course use all information provided on an anonymous basis.


Any input would be very much received. Thank you all! x

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/23259-maternity-policies-in-the-city/
Share on other sites

I work for a Big 4 accountancy firm and we get 16 weeks at 90 per cent pay and then statutory after that. Additional cash benefits continue throughout so for instance, my car allowance which is in cash, gets paid throughout maternity leave in full, as well as medical insurance and pension contributions.


Transparency in maternity pay policies would be great so that we are empowered to take it up with employers as part of package negotiations.

Magic circle law firms are very similar to the big 4 accountancy firms. (Although some make you pay some back if you don't stay for 6 months/1 year after you return from maternity leave)


Mid-sized law firms are typically much less generous although some are better than others. The one I just left had a sliding scale, depending on how long you had worked there. The best was 6 weeks at 90% and then 6 weeks at 75% (then statutory).


I agree - transparency would be very helpful....

I used to work for a big American insurer and it was 10 weeks full pay, 16 weeks 1/2 pay. Broker firms were worse and offered the statutory.

I think there was a similar thread a few months back so it might be worth doing a search.

Most companies over a certain size are supposed to have consultation groups. Maybe they could help? Or could just infuriate your company...

http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/employment/employeeinformationandconsultation/dg_10028095

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Yes..that may be the case but membership STARTING at £115 a month is still unafforable for many. Council gyms also have a large range of equipment and I had a  PT at Dulwich leisure centre when I was in Full Time employment who was incredible and even kept in contact during lockdown giving me a program I could do at home and checking in weekly at no charge or personal gain for herself. I dont doubt that Fit For may be a good gym (Its been in situ long enough so must be doing something right) However the cost of membership means it is affordable for the few not the many. If I could afford that kind of fee I would rather get a train to Canary Wharf and go to Virgin active where theres a pool and incredible classes and facilities 
    • This sounds great 👍 
    • We found a red TREK bike yesterday that had clearly been stolen and dumped. Would love to reunite it with its owner. Get in touch if you know whose it is.
    • Hey, I am interested. I had started a club last year however everyone slowly dropped off but I am always up for morning runs and some evening runs too.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...