Type | Report |
Title | The career cost of family |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
URL | http://workplaceflexibility.org/images/uploads/program_papers/goldin_formatted_12-12-10.pdf |
Abstract | This paper concerns the career costs of family and how these costs have changed in occupations at the upper end of the education and income spectrums. Career costs of family include penalties to labor supply behavior that is more compatible with having a family, such as job interruptions, short hours, and part-time work. Self-employment, when it involves owning a practice, often requires more hours of work because of classic agency problems and is less conducive to family. But when self-employment does not entail capital ownership it often enables women to set their own hours and enjoy greater workplace flexibility. We study the pecuniary penalties for these family-related amenities, how women have responded to them, and how the penalties have changed over time. The career costs of family vary greatly across the high-end careers we study. More important, perhaps, is that the penalties to family-conducive behaviors have largely decreased over time. We conclude that many professions at the high end (e.g., pharmacy, optometry, some medical specialties, veterinary medicine) have experienced an increase in workplace flexibility driven often by exogenous changes but also endogenously because of increased numbers of women. Some sectors, notably in the corporate and financial areas, have lagged. |