Brennan Center for Justice
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 29, 2006
1:47 PM
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CONTACT: Center for Economic and Policy Research
Lynn Erskine, 202-293-5380 x115
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"Tag-Team Parenting" Used by Lower-Income, Less-Educated Workers
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WASHINGTON - August 29 - Parents with lower incomes and less education are more likely to work alternating schedules than richer and more educated families, according to a report by the Center for Economic and Policy Research. White parents are more likely to have similar work schedules and less "tag-team parenting" than Hispanic or mixed race/ethnicity families.
The report, "Tag-Team Parenting," by economist Heather Boushey, looks inside families where parents work alternating schedules to understand how they balance work and child care. It finds that young, low-income and less-educated parents are more likely to work different shifts to provide childcare. To read the report, see: http://www.cepr.net/publications/work_schedules_2006_08.pdf
"Many American families cannot afford the luxury of sitting down together for dinner. Social policy should aim to ensure that working parents, and workers more generally, are able to balance work and family," said Boushey.
The report finds that:
-- Less educated parents are more likely to work evening and night shifts. Among working mothers without a high school degree, only 58.5 percent have a day shift.
-- Within two-earner, married-couple families with young children, the most common kind of childcare is formal daycare (29.4 percent), followed closely by relative care (27.3 percent), then parental care (25.5 percent). Lower-income two-earner married couples are more likely to use parental and relative care than higher-income families.
-- While 27.1 percent of married mothers use parental care, only 10.3 percent of single mothers report parental care as their most common kind of childcare.
-- Low-income mothers are more likely to report that they work their current schedule to address childcare needs (41.5 percent) compared to those in the top income quartile (30.0 percent).
-- The older a family is, the more likely it is that the spouses have similar schedules.
“While some parents choose to work alternating schedules to care for their children, many families do not have any choice in the matter. It is all that is available or affordable,” said Boushey.
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