Take care of your moms
If you have employees with elementary-school-aged children, hopefully you recognize how challenging the COVID-19 pandemic has been for those parents.
Of course, both moms and dads have struggled, but it’s working mothers who have borne the brunt of the challenges, according to new research from Washington University in St. Louis.
The research, released in March, shows the gender gap between mothers and fathers of elementary-school-aged children in the labor force has grown significantly since the onset of the pandemic. This is especially the case in states where schools primarily offered remote instruction.
And, the research concludes, there could be long-lasting effects.
Forced to choose between kids and work
At the start of the 2019-20 school year, the number of mothers of elementary-school-aged children in the U.S. workforce was, on average, 18 percent lower than the number of fathers.
By last September, the gap grew to over 23 percent in states where schools primarily offered remote instruction.
In comparison, in states where in-person instruction was most common, the gender gap in parents’ labor force participation grew by less than one percentage point, to 18.4 percent.
As this research shows, a significant number of mothers have paid the price of the childcare crisis created by the COVID-19 pandemic by leaving their jobs. And when mothers are forced to choose between their families and jobs, it impacts not only their immediate financial stability. Psychological well-being, economic independence, and lifetime occupational attainment and earnings are also at risk.
The problem is bigger than you and your organization, of course. The country as a whole needs to think not only about safely reopening schools, but also the infrastructure for childcare going forward.
There is plenty you can do today in your own organization to help employees who are parents, however. See “How can HR help parents struggling from the impact of the pandemic” for some ideas.