Home » HR practices » Recruitment/Employer branding/employee loyalty » Santander extends right to maternity and paternity leave to all staff across global operations Santander extends right to maternity and paternity leave to all staff across global operations Through . Published on 06 March 2020 à 11h11 - Update on 06 March 2020 à 16h04 Resources Santander is introducing a global minimum standard for parental leave in every market in which it operates, with mothers granted at least 14 weeks of paid leave and the father or secondary parent granted at least 4 weeks. Paternity or secondary parental leave can be taken in a single period or in two periods of two weeks until the child is one year old. The rule is applicable for the 196,000 people employed by the bank across the 10 countries in which it operates. The change results in an increase in maternity leave for branches in three countries – Argentina, Mexico and United States – as well as an improvement to the paternity leave entitlement for employees in six countries – Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Portugal, Poland and Uruguay. Santander also says that in countries where national law is more advantageous as regards parental leave entitlement, those provisions will apply. The new standard is due to be implemented within a maximum of three years, meaning it will enter into force on a global scale by the end of 2022. The change is part of the banking group’s efforts to reach a proportion of 30% of senior leadership roles being held by women, compared to 23% at the end of 2019. Need more info ? Contact mind's on-demand study service Which service do you want to contact :WritingCommercial serviceTechnical SupportFirst name Last name Organization Function email* Object of the message Your messageRGPD J’accepte la politique de confidentialité.PhoneThis field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Essentials Les dernières publications CSRD: social and environmental reporting market takes shape Supporting parenthood in the workplace: a win-win strategy Analyzes Les dernières publications Paternity leave: data observations from 41 countries EU: during H1 2022 five EU Member States have raised their minimum salary levels