IFS - Mothers suffer big long-term pay penalty from part-time working

6 Feb 2018 08:51 AM

In the early 1990s, average hourly wages were almost 30% lower for female employees than for male employees. The gender wage gap has come down, but it remains at around 20%.

There are lots of reasons for the scale and persistence of this gap, but new work, funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and published yesterday by IFS, shows that one important factor is that mothers spend less time in paid work, and more time working part-time, than do fathers. As a result, they miss out on earnings growth associated with more experience.

The effect of part-time work in shutting down wage progression is especially striking. Whereas, in general, people in paid work see their pay rise year on year as they gain more experience, our new research shows that part-time workers miss out on these gains. The vast majority of part-time workers are women, especially mothers of young children.

This accounts for an important part of the gender wage gap. By the time a first child is grown up (aged 20), mothers earn about 30% less per hour, on average, than similarly educated fathers. About a quarter of that wage gap is explained by the higher propensity of the mothers to have been in part-time rather than full-time paid work while that child was growing up, and the consequent lack of wage progression. About a further tenth of that gap is explained by mothers’ higher propensity to have taken time out of the labour market altogether.

The lack of earnings growth in part-time work has a particularly big impact for graduate women, because they are the women for whom continuing in full-time paid work would have led to the most wage progression. For example, a graduate who has worked full-time for seven years before having a child would, on average, see her hourly wage rise by a further 6% (over and above general wage inflation) as a result of continuing in full-time work for another year, but would see none of that wage progression if she switched to part-time work instead.

So while it would be no panacea, there is scope for improved wage progression in part-time work to play a significant role in closing the gender wage gap – especially among graduates.

Other findings from the study include:

Monica Costa Dias, IFS associate director and an author of the report, said: “There are many likely reasons for persistent gaps in the wages of men and women which research is still investigating, but the fact that working part-time has a long-term depressing effect is an important contributing factor. It is remarkable that periods spent in part-time work lead to virtually no wage progression at all. It should be a priority for governments and others to understand the reasons for this. Addressing it would have the potential to narrow the gender wage gap significantly.”

Robert Joyce, IFS associate director and another author of the report, said: “There has been a substantial fall in the gap between the earnings of lower-educated men and women over the last 25 years. However, there has been no fall at all in the gap for graduates. Traditionally, it has been lower-educated women whose wages were especially low relative to similarly educated men. It is now the highest-educated women whose wages are the furthest behind their male counterparts – and this is particularly related to the fact that they lose out so badly from working part-time.”

Notes to Editors

1. The full report ‘Wage progression and the gender wage gap: the causal impact of hours of work' by Monica Costa Dias, Robert Joyce and Francesca Parodi, was published by the Institute for Fiscal Studies on Monday, 5 February 2018 on the IFS website. For queries, contact the IFS Press Office on 020 7291 4800 / 07730 667013 or email Emma_H@ifs.org.uk or Thomas_H@ifs.org.uk.

2. The authors are very grateful to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation who funded this research. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation is an independent organisation working to inspire social change through research, policy and practice. For more information visit jrf.org.uk. JRF is on Twitter. Keep up to date with news and comments @jrf_uk. For press releases, blogs and responses follow @jrfmedia.

3. Support from the ESRC-funded Centre for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy at IFS is also very gratefully acknowledged.