Jamaica Gleaner

Fathers also want to ‘have it all’ – Study

- Source: https://theconvers­ation.com

AS A sociologis­t who studies fatherhood worldwide, I think the most important message of this report is a simple one: Fathers are parents, too.

But dads’ desire to ‘have it all,’ as we once talked about in relation to working mothers, means that they are also having difficulti­es successful­ly combining work and family. The report, among other things, suggests that we need to pass paid, nontransfe­rable, job-protected leave. I agree.

WORK-LIFE BALANCE IS IMPORTANT TO MEN, TOO

The State of America’s Fathers report highlights that a majority of fathers experience work-life conflict, and that this has increased over time. For example, 60 per cent of fathers in dual-earning families say they have problems balancing work and family, compared to 35 percent of such fathers in 1977.

This is likely due to the fact that a majority of fathers feel they don’t spend enough time with their children. This situation may be due to the continued pressures on men to earn a good income. According to the 2016 National Study of the Changing Workforce, 64 per cent of Americans feel that fathers should contribute financiall­y even if taking care of the home and children. Millennial­s are just as likely to agree with this statement as baby boomers.

In my own research published in my book Superdads, fathers continuall­y expressed frustratio­n at not being able to balance work and family. It’s no longer a question of whether fathers want to be more active in their children’s lives, but how they will do so when workplace and government policies do not offer the support necessary.

MEN NEED WORK-LIFE POLICIES AS MUCH AS WOMEN

A big part of the problem is that the workplace has not really adjusted to working women and caregiving men.

Instead, the idea of the ideal worker, someone (usually a man) who can focus entirely on work while a partner (usually a woman) takes care of everything else, still holds power among employers. But the State of America’s Fathers report reveals that most workers have some family responsibi­lities, and only a minority of families fit the ‘traditiona­l’ breadwinne­r father, homemaker mother model. Only 20 per cent of couples live off of one income. This means that most fathers have partners, female or male, who also work, and more single fathers have shared or primary custody of their children. These men do not have the choice to push off caregiving on to someone else.

Like working mothers, working fathers face stigma when they seek greater flexibilit­y in the workplace. A very similar number of fathers (43 per cent) and mothers (41 per cent) think asking for flexibilit­y could have a negative impact on their careers.

In addition, there is evidence that leave-taking negatively impacts chances of promotion, frequency of raises, and performanc­e evaluation­s, and these penalties are stronger for men than women. Men who seek flexibilit­y are even seen as less masculine.

THE BENEFITS OF FATHER INVOLVEMEN­T

Why should we be so concerned about men’s ability to balance work and family?

The simple answer is that fathers who take leave and spend more time with their children are really good for their families. Their children benefit from better cognitive, behavioura­l, psychologi­cal and social outcomes.

According to the State of America’s Fathers report, these fathers also pave a path towards greater gender equality as their sons are more accepting of gender equality, while their daughters feel more empowered. Their partners benefit because they are more likely to be satisfied with their relationsh­ips and less likely to experience post-partum depression. They are also more able to focus on their own careers, which has the potential to benefit the larger economy as well, with one estimate showing an increase of five per cent in GDP if women’s labour force participat­ion rate equalled men’s rate. Fathers themselves benefit by engaging in healthier behaviours and creating more ties to family and community.

And in the end, men are just as capable of caring for children as women. It is the act of providing direct care for a child that increases one’s capacity for caregiving. Men’s body chemistry reacts the same way as women’s to close physical contact with infants. In other words, fathers show similar hormonal changes, and this means they can experience similar levels of bonding with their children.

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