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- W2156863299 abstract "Reasons for the sustained increase in dual-earner couples are many, including the rise in women’s educational attainment, the increase in their full-time employment rate, and expanded occupational opportunities. Other reasons, particularly for couples with children, involve increased acceptance of alternative work arrangements (flexible work hours, compressed work schedules, telework), expanded childcare options, and changes to parental leave. Together these factors have improved women’s access to betterpaying jobs and their ability to rise in the ranks. While for some couples the rising cost of living may have made two incomes a financial necessity, for others it may be a matter of both spouses pursuing their own interests or aspirations. One notable corollary has been an increase in wives earning more than their husbands. Between 1967 and 1982, the proportion of wives who were primary breadwinners rose from 11% to 18% and hovered around 19% throughout most of the 1980s. The steady rise was likely the joint effect of women’s long-term movement into higher-paying managerial and professional occupations (Hughes 1995), more women working full time, and better maternity benefits, combined with the much slower rise in men’s average earnings over the period. During the recession of the early 1990s, the proportion of women who were primary earners jumped to 25%, 1 mainly because men in highwage and manufacturing jobs experienced periods of unemployment (Crompton and Geran 1995). The proportion continued at approximately 1 in 4 dual-earner couples for the rest of the decade even as employment levels improved, hitting a high of 29% in 2003, or about 1.4 million couples (Chart A). The continued rise suggests that women in the role of primary breadwinner is not likely a temporary phenomenon resulting from a recessionary period. 2" @default.
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- W2156863299 date "2006-01-01" @default.
- W2156863299 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W2156863299 title "Wives as primary breadwinners" @default.
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