Workforce dropouts. 865,000.
That's the number of women who left the workforce in September. The figure is even more sobering when compared to how many men left their jobs last month: 216,000. Put another way, 80% of the 1.1 million workers who dropped out of the workforce last month were women. And another: four times more women than men stopped working or looking for work in September.
The National Women's Law Center crunched these numbersbased on the month's jobs report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And it's easy to speculate about the cause of this gigantic disparity.
"This is the devastating impact of the ongoing breakdown of our nation's caregiving infrastructure in the face of COVID-19," Emily Martin, the NWLC's vice president for education and workplace justice, told CNBC. "As families across the country struggle to figure out how to keep their jobs while also making sure their children are cared for, safe and learning every day, it's women who are being pushed out of work."
Back in April, 14% of women were considering quitting their jobs because of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a survey by pay equity startup Syndio. Since then, access to childcare has only become more critical as the pandemic continues into the new school year and, it seems safe to assume, through the end of 2020. Late last month, Zinthiya Ganeshpanchan, a nonprofit executive whose organization serves vulnerable women in the U.K., told the NYTthat the pandemic and lack of access to childcare would take the women she serves "10 years back."
These numbers also bring to mind the statistics that have come out during the pandemic showing how the burden of childcare and homeschooling has fallen disproportionately on women. Remember this May NYT headline? "Nearly Half of Men Say They Do Most of the Home Schooling. 3% of Women Agree."
The women who left the workforce—which means they're neither working nor looking for work—in September outnumber the 661,000 jobs the U.S. economy added last month. Women gained only two in five of those positions.
Of the 865,000 women who dropped out, 58,000 were Black women and 324,000 were Latinas—who also saw unemployment increase from 10.5% in August to 11% in September, one of the only increases in joblessness for any group.
Emma Hinchliffe, Fortune, Broadsheet, October 5, 2020
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October 5, 2020
Voices4America Post Script. Women who left the workforce—which means they're neither working nor looking for work—in September outnumber the 661,000 jobs the U.S. economy added last month. Put another way, 80% of the 1.1 million workers who dropped out of the workforce last month were women. These numbers are shocking!
We need an administration that cares about families, including women and children. #BidenHarris2020