•Press Release Economic Growth Workers
April 15, 2014
For Immediate Release: April 15, 2014
Contact: Madeline Meth ([email protected])
Washington, D.C.– A new report out today from the Center for American Progress and the Center for Economic and Policy Research puts a dollar value on the economic importance of women’s rising work hours. According to the report, GDP would have been roughly 11% lower in 2012 if women’s employment patterns had remained unchanged over the past three decades. In today’s dollars, this translates to more than $1.7 trillion less in output—roughly equivalent to combined U.S. spending on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid in 2012.
“While much research has focused on how women’s rising work hours have impacted women and the economic well-being of their families, our paper explores how women’s earnings actually affect the strength of the middle-class and the overall economy,” said Heather Boushey, Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress and co-author of the report. “The finding that the movement of women out of the home has a measurable impact on GDP and on the middle class make the need to restructure our employment standards for the reality of the 21st century work force even more urgent.”
Over the past three decades, there has been a steady rise in the share of women, especially mothers, in the workforce. “The Economic Importance of Women’s Rising Hours of Work” finds that this dramatic increase in women’s working hours has had a substantial impact both on household earnings and the economy more generally. Key findings of the report include:
The importance of mothers’ additional hours of work and their earnings to our economy lend a new urgency to rethinking U.S. labor standards for the 21st century. Even as mothers and women are making significant contributions to the U.S. economy, they continue to do so within a set of institutions that too often do not provide them with the kind of support that they need to do this successfully both at work and at home. To address these issues, the report recommends giving workers more control over their schedules with a right-to-request law, instituting a national family and medical leave insurance program, and allowing workers to earn paid sick days.
The paper was originally presented at the 75 Years of the Fair Labor Standards Act Conference at the Department of Labor and the research was supported by the Rockefeller Family Fund.
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