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COVID-19 is a disaster for mothers' employment. And no, working from home is not the solution

COVID-19 is a disaster for mothers' employment. And no, working from home is not the solution
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When COVID-19 hit, some commentators hailed it as an gender roles in heterosexual couples.

But as public life froze overnight and homes became schools, daycare centres and offices, mothers have been placed under not less.

Our on workers in the United States shows that in the first months of the pandemic, mothers noticeably reduced their employment, but fathers' time at paid work was unchanged.

This is a finding with serious implications not just for the US, but for Australia, where women's unemployment during COVID-19 is men's.

Parents can have a hard time doing it all under normal circumstances. But during these extraordinary times, our research shows mothers' employment is suffering.

Gender gap in employment grows

Our research uses recently released figures from the US , a nationally representative dataset collected monthly by the .

The data is collected at multiple time points, so we can see how employment changed for a consistent set of American parents from February to April 2020, during the height of state lockdowns.

Our analysis shows mothers with kids of all ages reduced their over the period.

Those with worked on average 1.8 hours less per week, while those with reduced their weekly work time by 1.9 hours. Even those with high-school children—who are expected to be independently completing assignments while building TikTok empires—reduced their work time by 1.5 hours per week.

What happened to fathers' work time? Nothing, really. Dads' employment hours remained largely the same.

Only fathers of high-school aged kids reported spending less time in work (1.2 hours per day). Those with the youngest kids—whose demands are arguably the greatest—reported no significant change in their work time.

Our study did not look at why mothers were scaling back their work. But others show housework, childcare and homeschooling time have and mums have picked up the slack.

These figures suggest mothers are experiencing conflict between their work and family commitments force them to cut back on work. In times of trouble, kids are more likely to and under coronavirus, Mum is trying to do it all under one roof.

Is working from home the answer?

We also specifically wanted to know how dual-earner parents, who both had jobs that could be done from home, were faring during the pandemic.

Here we found mothers working from home with preschool-aged children reduced their daily work time by 2.6 hours. Mothers with older kids did not show similar reductions, indicating work at home is more difficult to combine with caregiving of younger children.

But when it came to their male partners working from home? You guessed it: fathers' work time remained unchanged.

Any parent who is working from home while caring for young children can tell you why it's hard to be productive.

As media reports have also shown, it involves an of work and caregiving demands, each interrupting the other. Parents find it nearly impossible to focus fully on work or caregiving when both need doing simultaneously.

One of the best-known examples of this during the pandemic is children interrupting their parents' video meetings—sometimes making in the process.

Philanthropist these work interruptions can humanise working parents.

But some mothers are being penalised for caregiving during work hours—either being fired, forced out of work or having their hours cut—this "humanisation" may come at a huge cost.

As the pandemic wears on, these work and life demands won't disappear and the consequences for working mothers are dire.

US mums are not the only ones

American mothers are not alone. A recent study found had been hit harder by COVID-19 than dads, with similar findings in .

In Australia, we already know coronavirus has seen women lose jobs than men. This was confirmed in the latest, , released in July. These showed women's full-time employment dropped by 5.2% since February, compared to 3.8% for men.

Other studies, including Melbourne University's survey are showing women's time spent caring has also increased more than men's during the pandemic.

In May, a joint Melbourne University Policy Lab and La Trobe University women were less likely than men to have their hours and pay unchanged and were suffering from more sleep disturbance and greater fears about their retirement funds.

Lessons for the future of work

COVID-19 has wreaked havoc on work and family life. But as our study shows, it was mothers who picked up the pieces at the expense of their employment.

And it is not over.

While Australia was for its effective early pandemic response, it now has one of the highest in the world.

As we continue to respond to COVID-19, now is the time to protect our protectors—to ensure mothers aren't getting snowed under with the added unpaid work of caregiving.

This requires a collective effort from governments, employers and partners to ensure we all share in the care.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: COVID-19 is a disaster for mothers' employment. And no, working from home is not the solution (2020, July 21) retrieved 11 September 2025 from /news/2020-07-covid-disaster-mothers-employment-home.html
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