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From Bowlby to Balls: Changes in the compatibility of motherhood and employment

Explore the revolution in the practice and perception of mothers' paid work over the past 60 years, from the influence of John Bowlby's Attachment Theory to current government policies.

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From Bowlby to Balls: Changes in the compatibility of motherhood and employment

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  1. Sub-brand to go here From Bowlby to Balls: Changes in the compatibility of motherhood and employment Heather Joshi Centre for Longitudinal l Studies The Changing Face of Britain Gresham College , October 21 2010 CLS is an ESRC Resource Centre based at the Institute of Education

  2. Paid work by mothers: a revolution in practice and perception over 60 years • In the 1950s mothers generally stayed at home with their children. This practice was endorsed by John Bowlby’s Attachment Theory - that mothers should prioritize bonding with their infants, not to mention a climate of opinion that mother’s place was in the home, while fathers were breadwinners • In the 2000s government policy and much public opinion has swung in favour of the much increased employment participation of mothers, has also acknowledged a greater non-maternal role for ensuring the welfare of children in the early years, and begun to support the role of fathers in the unpaid sphere. • Although Ed Balls does not have a successor as Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families, the new government will be facing this secular change.

  3. Overview • The rise of the working mother in Britain • Motherhood and earnings and changing opportunites • Gender equity as threat to fertility • Complementary care • Mothers’ employment as a threat to child development? • Policy for compatibility of parenthood and production in the new century

  4. 1. The rise of the working mother • We start by taking a long perspective over cohorts ( generations0 born in the 20th Century

  5. Cohort differences in family and education

  6. Years between first birth and next job at the median 16 14 14 13 13 13 12 12 12 10 10 All 9 years 8 No qualifications 8 Higher qualifications 6 6 6 6 5 4 4 2 2 1 0 0 0 1910 1922 1934 1946 1958 1970 mother's year of birth Mothers’ employment gap by cohort

  7. Source Millennium Cohort Study, mainly 2004 80 70 60 50 part-time 40 full-time 30 20 10 0 Degree ‘A level’ ‘O level/ GSE’ Other None of these Total Level of mother's highest qualification Employment of Mothers with a child aged 3, 2004

  8. 2. Motherhood, lifetime earnings and gender equity

  9. Lifetime Earnings • Simulations of lifetime earnings, partly projected, up to retirement age cohorts entering the labour market in post-war Britain • Averaged over 3 levels of education and three family sizes • Women to have interruptions and part-time work for children, and to be paid less on that account, and for a pure gender penalty • Men assumed to work continuous full-time

  10. No Quals Mid quals High quals 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 4 kids 2 kids 0 kids 4 kids 2 kids 0 kids 4 kids 2 kids 0 kids Born 1955 Born 1940 Born 1970 Simulated relative lifetime earnings by cohort, children and education

  11. Lifetime earnings: ratio of women to men by year of birth 70% 62% 60% 50% 39% 40% womn/men approx 30% 21% 20% 10% 0% 1940 1955 1970 YEAROF BIRTH Gender gap in life time earnings

  12. 3. Is gender equity a threat to fertility? • It used to be thought that establishing equal opportunities for women in education and employment would lower childbearing through raising the opportunity cost of motherhood. • The opening of career opportunities is likely to have helped drive the postponement of motherhood from the 1970s onwards, but it may not have reduced the fertility rate much as these women as women became ‘working mothers’. • Internationally, across Europe the fertility rates started to be positively correlated with female employment rates ( cf Scandinavia vs Mediterrean countries) , and some demographers now argue that gender equity and access of parents to the labour market is a condition of reviving low fertility, rather than a threat to it. ( ter McDonald, PDR 2000)

  13. 4. Complementary care • Various institutions are modifying the opportunity costs of motherhoos in Britain. • Child care services increasingly acceptable and affordable having been more or less invisible until the 1990s. • Fathers’ participation as hands-on parents has even been recognised in statutory paternity leave, though of much shorter duration than maternity leave, and interchangeable parental leave has also been introduced since 2000. • Traditional divisions of labour in the home are more diverse than they were in the 1950s.

  14. Main child care arrangement at age 3, MCS, by Mother's Job and Parental Qualifications 100 90 80 70 Formal Group Settings 60 Childminder/nanny weighted % Other informal 50 Grandparent 40 Partner or self 30 20 10 0 Full- Part-time Degree 'A-level' 'O/GCSE' Low/None Mother's Parents' Highest job Qualification 1444 3782 2791 1132 1150 318 unweighted sample nos Childcare: main arrangement for Working mothers with child aged 3

  15. Dads short of time with child

  16. 5 Mothers’ employment as a threat to child development? • There is more passion and panic about this subject than will be convinced by statistical evidence. • Such as it is, the estimates of mother’s employment in a child’s early years are mixed, minor and far from conclusive proof either of harm or no harm. • A selection of our estimates on British and US data follows. Our suggestion is that the workplace has become more friendly, and mothers are more able to make the compromises between caring and their careers than used to be the case. • Mothers employment seems not to be decisive, her economic resources, mental health and support network need to be considered.

  17. Estimated effects of employment at age 0 on child’s Maths,Literacy, Behaviour at ages 4-16:

  18. 6. To sum up • Motherhood and paid work no longer incompatible. • Diversity rather than uniformity in modern parenthood. • Childrearing is no longer mother’s monopoly. • Children are still more than the business of mothers, and women’s business is more than their own children.

  19. Policy for compatibility of parenthood and production in the new century • Although Every Child Matters is yesterday’s slogan, the sentiment still holds, at least for their parents. It is also clear from research, as well as life, that every child is different. One size of private or public policy does not fit all. • Parental and productive roles can be compatible for both men and women under the new sets of expectations with which the 21st century has started. The challenge for policy makers now is to keep a range of options open, in terms of access to childcare, leave and flexible hours for parents, as well as support for those who choose or have to stay at home. Families need Flexibility

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