Gender care gap affecting working women

Published on

New research from AIG Life shows a gender care gap is costing women at work as they manage the majority of child care and often also care for elderly relatives.

AIG’s study of more than 3,000 adults found women are nearly three times more likely to have to take time off work to look after children. The research shows 74% of women say they are the main carer for children taking short or long periods off work to look after family compared with just 26% of men.

However, there are signs younger generations are changing attitudes: 51% of men aged under-35 say they are the main carer for their children compared with 73% of women aged under-35.

76% of women believe they will be the main carer for an elderly relative ahead of their partner compared with just 62% of men. But just one in three women who take time out of the workplace to be a carer plan to return to full-time jobs compared with 59% of men.

What the research also found is women are more likely to say they do not want to be a burden on their own children should they need care in the future – 51% of women said they would not want to burden their children while 36% of men felt the same.

The research shows women generally enjoy their jobs more – 58% of women say they enjoy their jobs compared with 52% of men. That isn’t translating into achieving career potential as 42% of men believe they have overachieved in their career compared to 36% of women. The research didn’t find a gender split on pay satisfaction either – 38% of all adults believe they are not paid enough, and men are just as dissatisfied as women.

Debbie Bolton, head of customer services & chief underwriter at AIG Life, said: “The debate about how to balance family responsibilities with work and the roles of men and women has been running for a long time.

“Attitudes take a long time to change and there are signs that care giving in younger generations is becoming more balanced across the genders, but it is the case that many of us, including women, still believe caring duties rests solely with women.

“What all families need to consider is where the care burden will fall and how they will manage financially if a family member is too ill to work, too ill to care for others and if they need someone to care for them. How will they manage financially if they have to give up work to care for a sick child, partner or elderly relative? None of us know what is around the corner, but we can take practical steps to plan for the future so we have the financial safety net to make choices based on what our family needs.”

AIG’s research found 12% of people questioned have already either given up work or gone part-time to care for others. Products such as AIG’s Income Protection provide a monthly payout for six months if the insured person has to give up work to care for a child or partner, while its Care Cover with Whole of Life Insurance provides a lump sum payout to help with care costs if the person insured is diagnosed as needing lifelong care.

AIG’s nationwide study, which is part of research into the issue of longevity and the societal impact of living to 100, also found that when a couple decides who will be the principle carer for an older relative, the primary factor is who is the blood relative (43%) followed by who earns more money (21%) and whose career is the most important (18%).

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

Landlords could face national insurance on rental income in budget

Landlords may soon be required to pay national insurance (NI) on rental income as...

The Right Mortgage launches autumn sales roadshows

The Right Mortgage & Protection Network has unveiled plans for a series of autumn...

Vida improves affordability for specialist borrowers

Vida Homeloans has unveiled a series of changes to its mortgage range aimed at...

Pivotal Growth strengthens national presence with two ‘bolt-on’ acquisitions

Pivotal Growth has expanded its UK footprint with the acquisitions of More Choice Financial...

Fleet unveils Renters’ Rights Bill guide for advisers and landlords

Fleet Mortgages has launched a new guide designed to help advisers and landlords prepare...

Latest publication

Latest opinions

HMOs: market realities, future prospects, and the broker opportunity

The HMO sector remains one of the most dynamic parts of the private rented...

Bridging the Pond: How large is the US bridging finance market, and compared to the UK?

When we first got started with LendInvest in the UK, post the financial crisis,...

Passing the affordability exam

As teachers and students of various ages have spent August nervously opening exam results...

Investors are changing their approach – and lenders should too

The buy-to-let market never stands still, but the pace of change in recent years...

Other news

Landlords could face national insurance on rental income in budget

Landlords may soon be required to pay national insurance (NI) on rental income as...

The Right Mortgage launches autumn sales roadshows

The Right Mortgage & Protection Network has unveiled plans for a series of autumn...

Vida improves affordability for specialist borrowers

Vida Homeloans has unveiled a series of changes to its mortgage range aimed at...