Women did three times as much childcare as men during coronavirus pandemic
Child
care demands
at home skyrocketed during the pandemic, but men and women did not split the burden equally.
Globally,
women took on 173 additional hours of unpaid child care last year, compared to 59
additional hours for men, a study released Friday by the Center for Global
Development, a poverty non-profit, found. The gap widened in low- and
middle-income countries, where women cared for children for more than three
times as many hours as men did.
Women
have felt many of the pandemic's worst economic effects, including an estimated
$800 billion in lost income, in large part due to increased demands on their
time at home. The Covid-19 recession unraveled gains in pay equality, female
labor force participation and unemployment, particularly among Black and Latina
women in the U.S. Global job loss rates among women were roughly 1.8 times
larger than those among men, according to a McKinsey & Co. estimate. And as
U.S. workers return to the office, mothers are more likely than fathers and
women without kids to stay out of work. Read
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