The prospective 'Dad Strike' in the UK, demanding better paternity leave, reveals a critical and often overlooked barrier to progress on gender equity: the system isn’t working for men either.
View in browser
Copy of OnBalance (1920 x 1080 px)

Hello Phoebe and welcome back to On Balance, our fortnightly round-up of news, views and research around the issue of diversity, equity and inclusion.

Dad’s the word

 

The prospective 'Dad Strike' in the UK, demanding better paternity leave, reveals a critical and often overlooked barrier to progress on gender equity: the system isn’t working for men either.

 

From day one of parenthood, financial and organisational structures make it difficult for many fathers to be active caregivers. This affects not only family dynamics but also long-term workforce participation, expectations, and outcomes.

 

For years, a focus on women was essential—there was no other way to get things moving. But real progress now means shifting from working with women to working on the system they work in. The Dad Strike shows that people’s thinking may be shifting and highlights that the outdated approach to parenthood, and the structures that come with it, limit everyone.

 

I have long advocated that having men in the room is critical to progress for all. But it is the nature of their involvement that matters: not simply as allies, nor as observers, but as full participants in conversations about work, care, and leadership. When they’re absent, we miss crucial perspectives and lose momentum for change that could benefit all.

 

The ‘Dad Strike’ is a timely reminder of what structural inequity looks like. The UK has one of the least generous paternity leave policies in Europe. In 2025, you cannot see this through any other lens, than one which reinforces the outdated assumption that caregiving is women’s work and that men’s primary role is to earn. It’s a policy that short-changes families, perpetuates workplace cultures that reward presence over participation and makes assumptions over agency.

 

Smart organisations, some of which we are fortunate to work with, already recognise this and are ahead of the majority of businesses. They are thinking systemically and they are engaging men, not out of obligation but based on the understanding that when you broaden the frame, new solutions emerge.

 

Equal parental leave, for example, doesn’t just support women’s careers- it gives men a legitimate stake in the caregiving conversation, disrupting old norms and creating space for shared progress.

 

We can see what happens when this works.

 

Companies like Aviva and Deloitte - whose parental policies are more inclusive - report measurable improvements in retention, engagement and equity. But there's something more: men who return from meaningful parental leave often bring with them a deeper understanding of what structural barriers feel like and a stronger commitment to challenging them.

 

The pushback against DEI may dominate headlines right now, but it could prove to be the catalyst we need. By bringing men more deliberately into the room, not just to listen, but to contribute—we have a chance to make equity efforts broader, deeper, and more durable.

 

This isn’t about fixing individuals. It’s about designing a better system. And that starts by acknowledging that the system isn’t working for everyone—including men.

 

Opinionpng

Why Trump’s baby bonus won’t work

Incentivising parenthood without systems change – Dr Eliza Filby

Shift of gender pay gap accountability to HR
Senior leaders step back from gender accountability – Financial Times

Shouty leadership falls short
Reflection on performative leadership – Financial Times

America learning the wrong lesson from Musk’s success
The myth of the maverick leader – New York Times

Screenshot 2025-01-17 at 10.50.02

The war on woke
What DEI backlash tells us about corporate culture – New Statesman

Ipsos poll finds support for DEI
Workplace initiatives still resonate with the majority – Ipsos

Points-based leadership at Revolut – does it work?
New performance metrics under scrutiny – People Management

Women more likely to be promoted in a crisis
Why opportunity shouldn’t only come during chaos – Ad Age

Most of pay gap caused by motherhood penalty
A reminder of where inequality begins – People Management

Is America really giving up on DEI?
Examining the future of inclusion in US business – USA Today

DEI vanishing from company filings
The quiet removal of diversity commitments – The Washington Post

  

NewsPNG

Dad campaign for paternity leave

Next week will see a ‘Dad Strike’ – The Guardian

Abandonment of day one paternity pay rights
Fathers miss out in Labour’s rights bill – The Guardian

Gen Z leading the return to office charge
Younger workers want structure and connection – Financial Times

The rise of robo-coaching
Automation enters the leadership development space – Financial Times

UK businesses rolling back DEI face greater risk
Legal concerns rise with policy rollbacks – People Management

Subscribe for your own On-Balance
LinkedIn

The Executive Coaching Consultancy, Peek House, 20 Eastcheap, London, London EC3M 1EB, United Kingdom, 02077956556

Manage preferences