Paid Family Leave
Stengthening Families and Our Future
This is an excerpt from the full brief.
Life for 21st-century children and families is defined by rapid
economic, social, and technological change, with profound
implications for human and workforce development. The demographics
of the American workforce bear little resemblance to those of past
decades. In most families today, all adults are in the workforce
and two-thirds of dual-earner couples work a combined total of more
than 80 hours a week. Many more families are also headed by a
single working parent, usually the mother. More than 55 percent of
women with children under 3 years old are in the workforce. Among
those employed, the number of hours of work has also increased,
most noticeably among women. Despite this, women commonly retain
primary caregiver responsibilities – for both young children
and elderly relatives.
Unlike elsewhere in the industrialized world, our federal and
state family and work policies have failed to keep pace with these
demographic changes. In 2012, the United States remains the only
industrialized nation without a national paid family leave program
that supports workers who need time off to attend to important
family needs, such as caring for a new baby or a sick child. This
policy vacuum has created a generation of families in which
parental work obligations increasingly compete with
children’s needs for parental time and energy. The conflict
between job and family demands is especially acute for low-income
parents, who often work in jobs that provide few family-support
benefits. This scenario is shockingly common in the United States,
where 44 percent of children live in low-income families and more
than one child in five lives in poverty.
To date, much of the focus of research and advocacy in the
states and nation has been on the benefits of paid family leave to
business – including improved employee retention and job
satisfaction – and workers’ rights, in particular,
gender equity. A growing body of research, however, suggests that
paid family leave also has beneficial effects on child and parental
physical and emotional health. Yet, the child and maternal health
outcomes of paid family leave are largely absent from the national
policy debate.
This policy brief looks at the effects of maternal employment
and parental leave policies on child health, child cognitive and
emotional development, maternal health, and the health of parental
relationships. It highlights compelling new arguments that
strengthen the case for paid family leave, and includes a set of
research-based recommendations to advance policy for this important
social benefit.