cover image: How COVID-19 Sent Women’s Workforce Progress Backward: Congress’ $64.5 Billion Mistake

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How COVID-19 Sent Women’s Workforce Progress Backward: Congress’ $64.5 Billion Mistake

29 Oct 2020

Four times as many women as men dropped out of the labor force in September, roughly 865,000 women compared with 216,000 men. This validates predictions that the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women—and the accompanying child care and school crises—would be severe. In July, a Washington Post article —titled, “Coronavirus child-care crisis will set women back a generation”—pointed out that “[o]ne out of four women who reported becoming unemployed during the pandemic said it was because of a lack of child care—twice the rate among men.” 1 In August, CNN ran the headline, “Working mothers are quitting to take care of their kids, and the US job market may never be the same.” 2
report work

Authors

Julie Kashen, Sarah Jane Glynn, Amanda Novello

Published in
United States of America

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