Original article USA Today: They were told they could have it all. So why are so many moms leaving their jobs? By Bailey Schulz, Madeline Mitchell, Jessica Guynn
Summary below:
More women—particularly mothers of young children—are leaving the workforce, threatening their long-term career prospects and the broader U.S. economy.
- Individual stories: Women like Miya Walker and Rachel Cola highlight how rising childcare costs, lack of support, and return-to-office mandates make working unsustainable.
- Workforce data: Labor force participation for mothers with children under six dropped to 66.4% in August, down nearly 2 points from last year. This reverses some of the pandemic-era gains when remote and hybrid work made balancing jobs and family easier.
- Key drivers:
- Return-to-office policies at major companies are eroding flexibility that helped women stay employed.
- Childcare costs average over $16,500 annually, with long waitlists, forcing many mothers to scale back or quit.
- Economic shifts, including fewer immigrant workers and government job cuts, also hit women—especially women of color—hard.
- Cultural pressures for “intensive parenting” make careers harder to sustain.
- Consequences: Women who step away face the “motherhood penalty,” with slower wage growth and career setbacks. In 2024, women earned just 85% of men’s wages on average. Exits from the labor force also weaken the overall economy, especially with an aging workforce and declining birth rates.
- Emotional tradeoffs: While many mothers treasure time at home with their children, economists warn that forced exits bring higher stress, loneliness, and financial insecurity.
Bottom line: Flexible work, affordable childcare, and supportive policies are essential to sustain women’s participation in the labor force. Without them, both families and the economy bear long-term costs.