Los Angeles Times

Flexible work not a panacea

A study finds fathers with flexible schedules earn more overtime, but mothers don’t.

- By Danielle Paquette Paquette writes for the Washington Post.

Flexible schedules free workers from rigid hours, boosting their health and productivi­ty. Or they kill collaborat­ion.

It depends on whom you ask.

Some business leaders bill a policy of flexible hours as a panacea for working parents. Why take a day off when your child has the flu if you have a laptop?

However, others — perhaps most famously Yahoo Inc. Chief Executive Marissa Mayer — say staffers working at different times and locations cramps quality.

“To become the absolute best place to work, communicat­ion and collaborat­ion will be important, so we need to be working side by side,” Yahoo told its employees in a 2013 memo that prohibited them from working from home.

Heejung Chung, a sociologis­t at the University of Kent in England, recently drove the discussion further, bolstering the idea that employees who work from home put in longer hours — though no one can definitive­ly say whether that labor is better or worse.

In the study, published this month in the European Sociologic­al Review, Chung’s team examined the work habits of German employees with flexible work hours from 2003 to 2011 and found that they bagged more overtime pay than those in stricter arrangemen­ts. That pattern held true regardless of position or type of job.

Chung found that men and women in full-time jobs with flexible schedules worked about the same amount of overtime hours. The same went for mothers and fathers.

The men, however, saw an earnings increase beyond overtime pay after switching from a concrete schedule to flexible hours. On average, they banked about $1,125 extra per year. The women enjoyed no such gains.

“Employers tend to believe that women use flexibilit­y mainly for familyfrie­ndly purposes, which results in women not being rewarded in the same way as men when using flexibilit­y, regardless of the increase in their devotion to work they exhibit,” Chung wrote.

The report carries relevance in the United States, where the time Americans spend at work has increased sharply over the last four decades.

The average worker amasses 1,836 hours per year, up 9% from 1,687 in 1979, according to the Economic Policy Institute. The trend probably stems from technologi­cal advances such as omnipresen­t smartphone­s, video chat and cloud computing. (Lower-paying jobs and work that involves physical labor are less likely to accommodat­e flexible schedules.)

Meanwhile, about threequart­ers of U.S. firms now allow some kind of scheduling flexibilit­y, government data show.

Researcher­s warn that a rise in flexible work will not level the playing field for working parents, particular­ly mothers, if bosses cling to old stereotype­s about primary caregivers. A study last year from Harvard Business School found that women were judged more harshly for leaving the office early.

German women, like American women, still shoulder the majority of domestic responsibi­lities. Chung’s research supports what a large body of academic evidence already suggests: Mothers are sometimes viewed as less committed employees, regardless of their productivi­ty — and that perception appears to show up in the way they are paid.

A Third Way study this year found that fatherhood on average brings a 6% wage boost for each child, while motherhood is associated with a 4% pay penalty.

“Greater flexibilit­y and autonomy over work sound great — and could well herald a new era of better worklife balance,” Chung wrote. “But ... we need to better understand exactly what’s going on to tackle some of these negative consequenc­es.”

 ?? Regine Mahaux Getty Images ?? WOMEN ARE “not being rewarded in the same way as men when using f lexibility,” a researcher wrote.
Regine Mahaux Getty Images WOMEN ARE “not being rewarded in the same way as men when using f lexibility,” a researcher wrote.

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