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Recent scholarship suggests welfare state interventions, as measured by policy indices, create gendered trade-offs wherein reduced work–family conflict corresponds to greater gender wage inequality. The authors reconsider these trade-offs by unpacking these indices and examining specific policy relationships with motherhood-based wage inequality to consider how different policies have different effects. Using original policy data and Luxembourg Income Study microdata, multilevel models across 22 countries examine the relationships among country-level family policies, tax policies, and the motherhood wage penalty. The authors find policies that maintain maternal labor market attachment through moderate-length leaves, publicly funded childcare, lower marginal tax rates on second earners, and paternity leave are correlated with smaller motherhood wage penalties.
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Michelle J. Budig
Joya Misra
Irene Boeckmann
Work and Occupations
University of Massachusetts Amherst
WZB Berlin Social Science Center
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Budig et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a00320a581c6e761e77aac8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0730888415615385