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A college degree is increasingly benefiting women at work, with noncollege women left behind
A college degree is increasingly benefiting women at work, with noncollege women left behind

CBS News

time05-08-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

A college degree is increasingly benefiting women at work, with noncollege women left behind

Women have made significant gains in the workplace over the past two decades, but one segment of female workers has been left behind: those without a college degree. New research shows a growing divide in progress in the workforce between women who have earned at least a bachelor's degree and those without any higher education. The share of college-educated women in the workforce increased by nine percentage points between 2004 and 2024, research from Third Way, a think tank advocating for moderate policy, shows. Meanwhile, women without a college degree barely notched gains: The share of noncollege women in the workforce increased by less than a percentage point over the same period, according to the report. "This divergence in the labor force experience of women with and without college degrees speaks to changes in recent years in the workplace, and around the culture of work," Curran McSwigan, Third Way's deputy director of economics and author of the report told CBS MoneyWatch. "And those changes are weighted toward women with degrees." For example, flexible work arrangements are now more common across corporations, allowing some workers to do their jobs from home, at least part of the time, and better balance work with caregiving duties. "Remote work has inherently baked in a lot more flexibility, so working mothers may be able to pop out to take their kids to doctors appointments, instead of taking time off," McSwigan said. White-collar firms have also improved benefits related to caregiving, with some even offering workers child care subsidies, allowing mothers to stay in the labor force, according to McSwigan. But women without a college degree are more likely to work in service-sector jobs that aren't as well paid and don't offer the same child care benefits. "White collar workplaces are more likely to provide workers with access to paid leave policies, even child care subsidies, and those are not traditionally the same types of benefits you see in more service-sector work that noncollege women are in," McSwigan said. Women in the service-sector may also work variable shifts, and require child care at hours during which day care centers don't typically operate. "A lot of day care centers are only open 9 to 5, so they are coming up to other barriers as well, that are inherent to the types of jobs they are working," McSwigan said. Working mothers with college degrees notched even greater gains in the work place over the past two decades, with their participation rising by 11 percentage points, from 57% to 68%, according to the report. By contrast, the percentage of noncollege-educated mothers working full-time increased just 0.1% in the last 20 years. "We have heard from policymakers that there has been strong labor force bounce back for women and that we are overcoming the 'she-cession' and making progress when it comes to women in workplace," McSwigan said. "But what the data and analysis is showing is these gains can be attributed to college women, and noncollege women are still on workforce sidelines, and it's hard to say we are making progress for working women if only those with college degrees are benefitting." For this reason, McSwigan emphasizes the need for broad-based policy efforts that support "the different needs that families are facing" to ensure that all working women receive the same benefits that college-degree holders have. "It's not one-size-fits-all approach," McSwigan said.

Survey in Japan finds record percentage of working mothers
Survey in Japan finds record percentage of working mothers

NHK

time13-07-2025

  • General
  • NHK

Survey in Japan finds record percentage of working mothers

A government survey has shown that across Japan, more than 80 percent of mothers in households with children under 18 are working -- the highest percentage on record. The finding is from an annual survey on the situation of households by the Health, Labour and Welfare Ministry. More than 40,000 households responded last year. It said an estimated 8,886,000 households had mothers with children younger than 18 years old. Out of those households, 7,180,000, or 80.9 percent, had working mothers. That's up by 3.1 percentage points from the previous survey in 2023, surpassing the 80-percent mark for the first time since comparable data became available in 2004. Among such working mothers in households, 3.02 million, or 34.1 percent, were regular employees, up by 1.7 percentage points from the previous survey. Non-regular employees were 3.26 million, or 36.7 percent, up 1.2 percentage points. The ministry says that improvements in social systems seem to have contributed to the increase in mothers as regular workers. There is also growing momentum for both men and women to continue working while raising children. The ministry says it will continue to provide support for balancing childcare and work, and to promote women's participation in society.

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