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Maternity Allowance Quarterly Statistics: February 2008

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Maternity Allowance: background

A woman who has worked and paid full National Insurance contributions in the relevant test period can get this allowance. It is paid for 18 weeks, at the earliest starting 11 weeks before the baby is due. If the woman does any paid work during this period, she cannot get the allowance for that time.

From 6 April 1987 most women who work for an employer and who have average earnings at or above the lower earnings limit are entitled to Statutory Maternity Pay which employers are liable to pay. Because of changes introduced under the EC Directive on the protection of pregnant women at work, employed women expecting babies on or after 16 October 1994 get higher rate Maternity Allowance. Women who are not employees in the 15th week before the baby is due get the lower rate of Maternity Allowance.

Changes to Maternity Allowance were introduced for women expecting babies on or after 20 August 2000. The employment and NI contribution tests were replaced with an employment test and test of average weekly earnings within the test period. The change extended MA to women earning too little to pay NI contributions provided their earnings were at least £30 a week.

Standard rate MA is paid to women whose average earnings at least equal the LEL and the self-employed who have paid a Class 2 contribution. Women earning less than this but at least £30 get MA worth 90% of that average (maximum payment standard rate).

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Contents

Table MA1 MA spells by Government Office Region
Table MA2 MA spells by age and number of days in payment
Table MA3 MA spells terminating by age and duration
Table MA4 MA spells terminating by weekly amount in payment and duration
Table MA5 MA spells by age and dependency
Table MA6 MA spells by status and Government Office Region
Table MA7 MA spells commencing in the period by employment status and rate reason
Table MA8 MA spells commencing in the period by employment status and number of jobs held

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Tables