Article about London’s growing childlessness crisis and the questions it raises about housing, childcare and whether families can afford to stay in the capital.
Analysis by @eirnolsoe featuring LCDS researcher @sanderwagner: https://t.co/WXhmyRIZhE
Two new studies by @sanderwagner deepen our understanding of the link between motherhood & labour market outcomes:
1) shows the link between motherhood penalties and broader gender inequality
2) explores how motherhood penalties are stratified
https://t.co/uiyBv4S9Ik
I want to thank the absolutely fantastic team on this paper for bringing it all together:
Andreas Filser (who is the first author) and the wonderful co-authors: Pascal Achard, Corinna Frodermann, and Dana Müller. Have a look at it all here: https://t.co/KXTCQWQiiu
New Pub 🚨📝🎓: "Stratification of Post-Birth Labour Supply in a High- and Low- Maternal Employment Regime" https://t.co/3CnDjtVu4S
TLDR: Germany has much bigger motherhood penalties than France, but they are less socially stratified. That wasn’t what we expected.🧵⬇️
3️⃣ There is no relationship between size and stratification of 🤰💸 across small labour markets, national policies matter!
4️⃣ 🇩🇪 benefits which are prop. to pre-birth income, probably increase incentives for high-earning mothers to stay home, thereby decreasing stratification
So, we were like:
ooh 🤔 small motherhood penalties (🇫🇷) come with a lot of stratification
medium ones (East-🇩🇪) with some
and big ones (West-🇩🇪) with little.
💡 Maybe the relationship is the other way around than we thought?
Finally, let me praise the fantastic team of co-authors that got deep into the weeds of cross-national administrative data analysis with me and made this challenging visual exploration possible: Andreas Filsesr, Pascal Achard and Inga-Marie Amend.
New article out in @SociusJournal 🚨
It shows how closely linked motherhood penalties 🤰📉 and gender inequalities 👨💼💰👩💼 are by studying many local labour markets. Thread 👇 https://t.co/9s9E4P6bUm
And if you are an academic wondering what to cite when writing about the "strong link between motherhood penalties and gender inequality in the labour market" ... baah voilà (oder hier bitte!)