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Study shows mothers are less wealthy than women without children

Study shows mothers are less wealthy than women without children
Having children can drastically change women’s economic and financial status. Credit: kathrinpie/pixabay

The direct and indirect costs of having children can be high and, in , women most often .

In a study, we measured the gender-specific economic impact of parenthood in Germany. Our finding: may end up with less accrued wealth than without .

German men, who are comparable in other characteristics such as education and age, on the other hand, show regardless of whether they have children.

Mothers accrue less wealth

The research, which was conducted in Germany, looked at 28,650 individuals to assess women's personal wealth over the course of a decade, from 2002 to 2012. For the purposes of our study, personal wealth refers to all economic assets that subjects own solely as well as their individual share of assets jointly owned with somebody else.

We found that each year after a woman's first child is born, she accrues only about 98 cents for each €1 of wealth that childless women gain. This small difference adds up over time. After being a mother for 50 years, a mother's personal wealth is roughly 60% lower than for a German woman who does not have children, everything else remaining equal.

This gap in capital is largely related to employment. German mothers accumulate less wealth because they are likely to and, as children get older, .

Without full-time employment, women have less income to put into savings. Employment gaps may also reduce long-term earning potential because .

According to our study, women's male partners do not appear to fully compensate for these losses in wealth by sharing financial resources within the couple.

The loss in personal wealth is the younger a woman is when she becomes a mother. The difference may be due to the fact that career interruptions early in one's working life are especially harmful.

Study shows mothers are less wealthy than women without children
Graph showing gender gap in wealth after parenthood. Credit: Lersch/Jacob/Hank

Mothers additionally accrue less wealth if they are unmarried when they give birth; a difference that holds for both single mothers and those living with their partners. This finding suggests that married fathers may be for their spouses' income losses, and that married mothers and fathers are more likely to .

By middle life (ages 40 to 60), mothers and fathers show the greatest discrepancy in wealth (see above graph). By older age, these inequalities decrease.

Why wealth differences matter

The reduced wealth of mothers as compared to fathers and to women without children has many important implications.

Financial assets and savings are resources that can be tapped to weather rainy days, independent of current income. Wealth can also be passed on to the next generation or invested in education and, thereby, affect the well-being of children.

For a woman living with a more wealthy partner, having little wealth may seem less important. But, as we know, couples their wealth.

And, in any case, also hurt women. if they had less wealth than their partners, and studies from Ecuador and Ghana have shown that the when women's personal capital is less than that of their partners. Although we do not know whether those findings would apply in Germany or other countries.

Finally, economic inequality between mothers and fathers can affect children. When mothers have relatively more resources, the . If couples separate, gender inequalities within couples may ultimately contribute to inequalities between ex-partners.

International differences

examined the wealth consequences of parenthood in Germany, where women have achieved equal status compared to men in many respects. Nonetheless, a , where men are the main breadwinners, still dominates here.

Study shows mothers are less wealthy than women without children
Germany lacks structures to help mothers with childcare. Credit: Thomas Peter/Germany

Other research, though based on less adequate data, has also found a between genders in the . Complementary evidence on income inequalities between mothers and fathers have additionally been found in many countries around the world, including , , and the .

Gender-based wealth inequality as a result of parenthood may be weaker in more egalitarian societies, .

Wealth inequalities between mothers and fathers – and, more generally, between women and men, even within married couples – are stronger in countries in which women and men do not have equal legal status.

In Ghana, for example, where women's contributions to marital assets are not recognised, married women own only . Similar exists in some parts of .

By contrast, , where women's legal status is more equal to men's, wealth inequalities within married couples are negligible.

Economic well-being of women and men

The finding that, in relatively gender-equal Germany, women end up with less after becoming mothers as compared to both childless women and to men suggests the need for a proactive government response.

Currently, ambiguous policies continue to . One approach for tackling mothers' economic disadvantages is to encourage maternal full-time employment, for instance, by providing better access to childcare.

Recent policy toward this goal may decrease disadvantages in the future. But accumulation is a slow process, and these changes will take time to have any effect.

In the meantime, mothers will continue to struggle to save up for that rainy day.

Provided by The Conversation

This article was originally published on . Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Study shows mothers are less wealthy than women without children (2017, April 27) retrieved 15 May 2025 from /news/2017-04-mothers-wealthy-women-children.html
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