Working mothers tend to feel more of the financial impact of high child care costs than their male counterparts because they’re more likely to reduce their hours, take lower-paying jobs or leave the workforce to accommodate for caregiving. Bankrate’s Motherhood Penalty Study found full-time working mothers earned 31 percent less in wages than full-time working fathers in 2023. If that wage gap remained the same over 30 years, those lost wages could add up to roughly half a million for working mothers.
The motherhood penalty
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