Is Being a Mom Bad for Your Career?
A recent study showed women experience a short-term "motherhood penalty" but their earnings rebound within a decade.

Is motherhood bad for women's careers? Conventional wisdom says "yes," but a new study suggests "maybe not."
The research comes from the IZA - Institute of Labor Economics, a German think tank seeking "to bridge the divide between science and society through science communication and evidence-based policy advice." In an April paper titled "Is There Really a Child Penalty in the Long Run? New Evidence from IVF Treatments," economists Petter Lundborg, Erik Plug, and Astrid Würtz Rasmussen complicate the picture of what happens to women's earnings after having kids.
On average, women in the study did experience a short-term "motherhood penalty" after giving birth. But within a decade, their earnings rebounded. Researchers even found evidence of a small motherhood premium in the long run. Among other limitations, most research on motherhood penalties focuses on the short term, note Lundborg and colleagues.
The researchers analyzed data on more than 18,500 Danish women who had undergone in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatments. Specifically, they compared economic outcomes for women whose initial treatment was successful (meaning they conceived) and those whose initial treatment was not. The data covered women who underwent IVF for the first time between 1994 and 2005 and followed these women—and their partners—for up to 25 years.
Some of their findings align with conventional wisdom. Women experienced "a large child penalty shortly after the birth of the first child," and this was not matched by a corresponding impact on the earnings of new fathers. But they also found "that this penalty fades out over time, with mothers eventually catching up to their childless counterparts."
Two years after IVF, "successfully treated women already begin to recover; 10 years later, successfully treated women are fully recovered and earn as much as their unsuccessfully treated counterparts; and from that point onwards, the successfully treated women earn as much as (if not more than)…unsuccessfully treated women," explains the IZA paper.
By 15 years after IVF, the child penalty had turned into a small child premium, with motherhood leading "to a small rise in lifetime female earnings cycle of 2-3 percent."
The findings "suggest that children contribute little to nothing to the persistent gender gap in earnings," the researchers conclude.
The motherhood penalty has been a staple of feminist concerns for more than a decade. The phenomenon, documented in an array of scientific studies, describes women's wages stagnating or declining after they have children. Men, in contrast, see an earnings boost after procreating.
"The motherhood penalty is the price women pay for growing their families while they're in the workforce," claims Fortune magazine. Due to this penalty, "even full-time employed mothers make 71 cents for every dollar made by a father," according to the American Association of University Women.
The IZA research may have personal and political ramifications. Discourse related to family policies and women's wages tends to "take the career costs of children as a mere fact," the researchers point out. Proposals surrounding things such as government-subsidized child care and guaranteed parental leave often take this as a given. How might the discussion look different if this wasn't the case?
It would be a mistake to extrapolate too much from this one study. While large and well-structured, it analyzed a very specific population. And while the authors did consider confounding factors—such as the fact that women who seek IVF "are, on average, richer, more educated, and older when they have their first child"—it's unclear to what extent the findings here universalize.
Still, this does represent a blow to the idea of a long-term and across-the-board motherhood penalty. And it matches up with a burgeoning body of research suggesting the same thing.
Sharon Sassler, a professor of public policy and sociology at Cornell University, researched the supposed motherhood penalty as it applied to women working in computer science. These mothers "receive both a marriage and parenthood premium relative to unmarried or childless women," according to Sassler's 2023 paper, titled "Factors Shaping the Gender Wage Gap Among College-Educated Computer Science Workers." However, the premium was "significantly smaller than the bonus that married men and fathers receive over their childless and unmarried peers."
And a 2016 study published in The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences found that between 1960 and 2010, the family wage gap (the wage difference between parents and the childless) declined for women regardless of occupation, while disappearing entirely for women in business and postsecondary education. Meanwhile, "a positive wage differential emerged in STEM, medicine, and law."
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "There's More to the 'Motherhood Penalty'."
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So, being a mother is of no value? Or even a punishment? Fundamentalist crap.
The kind of drivel that is typical of an affluent white female urbal liberal (AWFUL).
Look who wants to push the handmaiden tale on everyone!
Is Having a Career Bad for Your Being a Mom?
Yes.
Women’s careers also interfere with proper sammich production.
What if her career is as a sammich maker?
Thank you. My thought exactly. When your boss says you need to work late and your child says he needs you, which do you choose? You cannot serve two masters and if you value your career as much as you do raising your children, then one will suffer.
Close, but not quite. Why do women prioritize their children's needs over their career demands, and men do not? Although it's not nearly a "free" market, the market will always find a way around artificial impediments to its inexorable workings. If your employer knows that benefits for women cost more and that the women they employ are less flexible, why would they want to pay them the same as men? Whether you approve of the market setting such things or not, it's going to happen whether you like it or not; and it's going to happen whether government tries to regulate it or not - often with serious unintended consequences that you also don't like.
Why do women prioritize their children’s needs over their career demands
Men don't have tits.
What population does this actually reflect? Is it rich German women with generous public benefits and labor laws that force businesses to pay women wages above the market value of their productivity? Are we talking about keyboard class workers whose labor amounts to a couple hours on a home computer per day? Are we talking about women and families who can afford nannies and outsource much of their childcare?
Here's a very simple reason for why fathers and mothers might earn more after having children: they need to or are at least incentivized to. If I didn't have a family I'd be content working a job I enjoy and earning the minimum to upkeep a happy living. As a father, I want to build for a future and will more aggressively seek promotions and raises. Likewise for women, being a cat mom doesn't drive them to progress in their careers. It only costs so much to stock Friskies and get coctails at a trendy bar. Women will also work harder and fight to better the lives of their children (especially those who take advanced measures to intentionally conveive.)
This sounds like yet another shitty study.
Motherhood is a career, if properly done.
Parenthood is a career if properly done.
New Evidence from IVF Treatments... 18,500 Danish women
"Scientists discover that when the government pays for women's reproduction and then (continues to) redistributes the nation's wealth after pregnancy to ensure that women catch up, after 15 yrs., they catch up."
Seriously, publicly-funded IVF, Danish women... way to get a representative sample. All CEOs and lawyers who were too busy making Danish society über successful collecting on their own amassed capital I'm sure. Probably not a bunch of nurses, hair dressers, and baristas putting off the costs of their desires and social obligations to "attend music festivals" into their mid-30s *and* have kids onto everyone else.
Hilariously, even at this, for the crazy cat lady putting off having kids because of "her career", it's still better to have the kid(s, humans can have more than one in case German or Danish researchers weren't aware) in your mid to early 20s (or earlier), lose out on a smaller total amount of earnings and catch up by the time you're 35 than it is to be missing a larger share of your higher earning years coming out closer to retirement.
But I'm sure we're just talking about 18,500 Danish women who were, for whatever reason, just naturally infertile or married to someone who is/was infertile and totally not looking to take advantage of a social welfare scheme.
The idea of this study was not so much to get a representative sample as to get a well-matched one. By doing it this way, they excluded several factors that might've co-varied between those who had children and those who didn't. Very clever to use IVF that way.
This is a problem in a lot of research involving living things: a tradeoff between sensitivity and fidelity of models.
Very clever to use IVF that way.
We eliminated the confounding variables of a non-representative sample to get a better measure of the effect that can't be extrapolated more generally.
The idea of the study was to generate propaganda for people like ENB, that's why between the researchers, ENB, and yourself, the "clever" aspect and "representative" nature gets simultaneously played up and obliterated. Just because you think you're clever by polishing the turd after you've shat in one hand and wished in the other to see which gets full first doesn't mean the rest of us have to accept it as a work of art.
Pairwise would be clever if you knew the effect to be representative, repeatable, and durable going in, and needed a more precise metric or distinction, not a "surprise" reversal or obliteration of known effects. It's like saying you know brownies need eggs to be lighter and fluffier so you ran a pair-wise experiment to determine how much time and temp it takes to get fluffy brownies and, at the end of your experiment, the egg brownies and the eggless brownies were the same consistency. You aren't a clever experimenter, you're a shitty baker.
ENB...You should address the managers aspect of these women. Meaning, the 'penalty' you see may reflect management styles of their supervisors, and if you slice these supervisors by age, you'll see the 'penalty' decreases as the age of the supervisor increases.
I have Moms that work for me, in my professional capacity. I much prefer them to the younger nincompoops I see today.
Meaning, the ‘penalty’ you see may reflect management styles of their supervisors, and if you slice these supervisors by age, you’ll see the ‘penalty’ decreases as the age of the supervisor increases.
As indicated above, the whole thing is a retarded non-sequitur that ENB is using to grasp at straws that may or may not exist.
Something like 50% of live births in the world are unplanned. Even in 'First World' conditions, it's well above 35%. Approximately 0% of IVF pregnancies are unplanned. Global average fertility rate is on the order of 2.5 children. The study only counts/regards single/first IVF pregnancies (or lack thereof). I haven't polled Danish women but I would be abjectly unsurprised to discover that the ones undergoing IVF are doing so specifically out of a desire to have a career (and redistribute wealth to people like themselves).
The research starts with a vague, false premise and "disproves" the vague, false premise. Imagine if the research said, "Common knowledge suggests that pregnant women earn less than their male peers, our research suggests that they may make up the difference 15 yrs. after their pregnancy." That's the research/narrative we're dealing with.
pretty sure my mother still blames my conception on killing her career lol.
"Is Being a Mom Bad for Your Career?"
Not really.
Thanks to the invention of the microchip, many people, regardless of sex, are working at home now, and this trend will continue as more companies, corporations, etc. see the many benefits of working at home.
Good luck with that plumber and nurse who work from home.
Over the course of a lifetime I've noticed a few things, in particular with young mothers. I'm sure all of us remember certain girls back in high school who became mothers at sixteen, seventeen, eighteen... And we remember how they were thought of and often treated. I remember personally thinking, well, I guess life is over for that poor thing.
You didn't see too much of them after high school. But then after a few years you'd see them about here and there, with their own kids growing up, and they didn't seem any worse off than anybody else. And still later on when their kids were old enough not to need baby sitters, you could see the kids and their mothers had developed a strong and healthy bond that, compared to "traditional" relationships, seemed to shine just a bit more.
I recall being surprised the more I saw this, but then it dawned on me that there were some good reasons for this.
First of all, these were not spoiled children; they had grown up with less. Perhaps they were closer to their mothers because they struggled together, unlike those with professional mothers who had a good job and the resources to (almost inevitably) spoil the child. Natural, albeit not universal.
Another thing I noticed was that the kids had more respect for the mothers, maybe because the bond they developed together was not disrupted by material things. And when these kids encountered anyone criticizing their moms, they would come to her defense with a vengeance.
But as years went on and the kids had grown up, I was often truly amazed at how youthful and attractive these mothers appeared, as if after all the hard work was done, they were given another go at life with an invigorated body and a healthy attitude. Some went to college or pursued careers.
Wow. But it kind of makes sense after all, considering our biology is so often at odds with our culture.
Anybody else notice these things?
Some of their findings align with conventional wisdom. Women experienced "a large child penalty shortly after the birth of the first child,"
Only duplicitous people solely focused on aborting as many babies as possible would even describe this as a 'penalty'.
The way it's described suggests, there a mother is, minding her own business when ALL OF A SUDDEN!
There is a cascading set of choices that women make-- and I've personally witnessed it, again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again and again just in my various places of work.
It's all well and good until one of the male employees has to trot up to HR and face off with the wymyn running it. It's like having to rumble with the neighborhood karens.
I've had my own experience having to deal them. I couldn't retire fast enough.
And working with women on the line...forget it. They will sabotage your work and make your life a hell in the process.
Your career however might be bad for your motherhood.
There's a motherhood penalty alright.
I think this is interesting and should be followed up on with further work. It would be nice to see a study of a broader group of women than just IVF recipients. I can think of a few variables I would like to see including;
- wage recovery period for women with HS degrees, women with new college degrees, women with established careers.
- wage recovery for stay home father vs stay home mothers.
Just some thoughts.
Why was this limited only to IVF mothers?
Due to this penalty, "even full-time employed mothers make 71 cents for every dollar made by a father," according to the American Association of University Women.
This nonsense has been refuted, rebutted, and rebuked so many times I've lost count.
“but Muh wAgE gap!” Feminazis continue to spew this debunked lie - it’s disgusting but just shows the Left is based on LIES.