Current:Home > NewsOpinion: Child care costs widened the pay gap. Women in their 30s are taking the hit. -RiseUp Capital Academy
Opinion: Child care costs widened the pay gap. Women in their 30s are taking the hit.
View
Date:2025-04-19 01:39:45
This month, the U.S. Census Bureau published a bombshell finding: The gender wage gap just got wider for the first time in two decades ‒ with women now earning just 83 cents to a man’s dollar.
That’s maddening. But, for moms at least, it’s hardly surprising. It’s next to impossible to balance work and family in this country ‒ and as this new data shows, women are taking the hit. As the cost of child care continues to soar, women will just keep falling further behind.
On paper, there’s no reason to believe that women should be earning less than men. Girls are more likely to graduate from high school and more likely to hold a bachelor’s degree.
More women than men go to law school and medical school, and women’s enrollment in MBA programs has reached record highs.
In fact, women do earn nearly as much as men ‒ at least early in their careers. On average, women in their late 20s and early 30s are much closer to parity, taking home at least 90 cents on the dollar compared with the guys sitting next to them at graduation or new hire orientation.
Then, when women hit their mid-30s, something changes. The pay gap gets wider. It’s no coincidence that that’s precisely when women are most likely to be raising kids. All of a sudden, women are forced to make very hard choices to manage the demands of work and family.
Motherhood penalty in the workforce is only getting worse
As the founder of Moms First, I’ve heard versions of this story from more women than I can count. Maybe mom drops down to part-time so she can make it to school pickup. Or maybe she switches to a new job that pays less but offers more flexible hours. Or maybe she drops out of the workforce entirely, because the cost of day care would have outpaced her salary anyway.
Make no mistake, we are talking about moms here. When women are paid less than men anyway (and, in the case of Black and Hispanic women, way less), deprioritizing their careers can feel like the only logical decision, even if it isn’t what they wanted.
This creates a vicious cycle, where pay inequity begets more pay inequity ‒ and women are systematically excluded from economic opportunities.
Opinion:Mothers cannot work without child care, so why aren't more companies helping?
At the same time, while women experience a motherhood penalty, men experience a fatherhood premium ‒ working more hours and reaping bigger rewards than those without kids.
As Nobel laureate Claudia Goldin put it, when describing her pioneering research on the pay gap, “Women often step back, and the men in their lives step forward.”
Because here’s the thing: The “choice” to step back from the workforce isn’t much of a choice at all. If grandma isn’t around to pitch in and child care costs more than rent, what other option do you have?
The cost of child care should be a central election issue
The problem is only going to get worse from here.
At home, moms are drowning ‒ with the U.S. surgeon general issuing an advisory cautioning against the present dangers to parents’ mental health and well-being. At work, diversity, equity and inclusion programs are under attack, denying women a fair shot to succeed.
Opinion:Parenting is overwhelming. Here's how one mom learned to cope.
After decades of glacially slow progress toward closing the pay gap, we’ve already backslid. I hate to imagine how much further we could fall. Especially when it’s so blindingly obvious what the solution is. If the lack of affordable and accessible child care is what’s holding women back, then we should make child care affordable and accessible.
To start, the business community can take action. When companies offer child care benefits, it’s not only a game changer for moms ‒ it’s a game changer for everyone. Offering these benefits pays for itself and generates a positive return on investment. If any other investment gave you these kinds of returns, it would be a no-brainer.
In this all important election year, we also need to demand that our lawmakers take bold, decisive action on child care. Policies like expanding the child tax credit, capping child care costs at 7% of working families’ income and paying caregivers a living wage are huge steps in the right direction. And it’s critical that our leaders continue to prioritize them.
We should take every opportunity to ask our candidates, up and down the ballot, how they plan to solve the child care crisis, and then we should hold them to their promises at the ballot box.
When I first began building the Moms First movement, a lot of people asked me: Why moms? Why not all parents? This is why.
Yes, the child care crisis hurts all of us, dads included. But moms are paying the price, in the most literal sense. We have to change that ‒ not just for our kids and families, but also for ourselves and our future.
Reshma Saujani is a leading activist, the founder and CEO of Moms First and the founder of Girls Who Code.
veryGood! (63152)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Tom Brady Spotted on Star-Studded Yacht With Leonardo DiCaprio
- Launched to great fanfare a few years ago, Lordstown Motors is already bankrupt
- New York, Massachusetts Move on Energy Storage Targets
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- The Bachelorette: Meet the 25 Men Vying for Charity Lawson's Heart
- 15 Summer Athleisure Looks & Accessories So Cute, You’ll Actually Want To Work Out
- 13-year-old becomes first girl to complete a 720 in skateboarding – a trick Tony Hawk invented
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Video shows shark grabbing a man's hand and pulling him off his boat in Florida Everglades
Ranking
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Katharine McPhee's Smashing New Haircut Will Inspire Your Summer 'Do
- Small businesses got more than $200 billion in potentially fraudulent COVID loans, report finds
- In Maine, Many Voters Defied the Polls and Split Their Tickets
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Titan sub passengers signed waivers covering death. Could their families still sue OceanGate?
- Was a Federal Scientist’s Dismissal an 11th-hour Bid to Give Climate Denial Long-Term Legitimacy?
- In Florence’s Floodwater: Sewage, Coal Ash and Hog Waste Lagoon Spills
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Britney Spears Responds to Ex Kevin Federline’s Plan to Move Their 2 Sons to Hawaii
Jessica Biel Shares Insight Into Totally Insane Life With Her and Justin Timberlake's 2 Kids
Is 100% Renewable Energy Feasible? New Paper Argues for a Different Target
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
The Bachelorette: Meet the 25 Men Vying for Charity Lawson's Heart
Indonesia Deporting 2 More Climate Activists, 2 Reporters
Video shows shark grabbing a man's hand and pulling him off his boat in Florida Everglades