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Father’s Day 2022: Why dads still don’t achieve equality on caregiving

Brad Harrington

Executive Director

Published June 8, 2022


This Father’s Day marks the 12th year that theBoston College Center for Work & Familyhas been working to better understandthe experiences of today’s working fathers. Over this time, we have published numerous reports, book chapters and journal articles aimed at helping the public and employers better understand the experience of today’s dads, especially with regard to work and family. Our research has focused mainly on the experiences of “white collar” fathers and we have studied a broad range of issues including the transition to fatherhood, at-home dads, millennial fathers, generational differences in fathering, and men’s attitudes about and utilization of parental leave.

Through the years, we have seen time and again that fathers today aspire (and often need) to be much more hands-on with their children than fathers a generation ago. They no longer see their role solely, or even primarily, as a breadwinner. In all of our studies, but especially those in 2011, 2015, 2016, and 2019, more than two-thirds of fathers said they want to share parenting equally with their spouse / partner. However, half of those fathers (that’s more than one-third overall) are not living up to that goal.We’ve identified these men as Conflicted Fathers— they aspire to share caregiving equally but are unable or unwilling to do so. And as we know, the past two years of COVID have done nothing to reverse this pattern. The.

The problem with being aConflicted Fatheris that you are not living up to your own standards and likely letting down your partner as well. The roughly one-third of dads who fell into this conflicted group in our studies also had the lowest level of satisfaction and fulfillment at workandat home when compared toTraditional FathersandEgalitarian Fathers.

The conversations, interviews and studies we have engaged in since 2010 have offered many likely explanations for this imbalance. In spite of the, fathers’ financial contributions to the family are typically greater than their partner’s. Organizations have been slow to catch up to and accept men’s important and expanded role in the home.Until recently, for example, men were not offered paternity leave in most organizations. The resulting lack of time “flying solo” caring for infants leads to lower levels of confidence and competence in caregiving for men while mothers often spent several months at home becoming the primary caregiver.

In recent months, we have analyzed a data set of more than 1400 men and women working in large corporations in the United States (collected by our Center prior to the pandemic). We were curious about what factors facilitated shared caregiving in dual-career couples, and which ones hindered it. Here’s what we discovered:

  • Women whose spouses took parental leavearemore likelyto achieve equality in caregiving.This reinforces, once again, that fathers who have extended periods of time at home with their children in their early days will continue to be more engaged caregivers in the long term.
  • Women who utilize flexplacework arrangements are less likelyto achieve equality in caregiving than those who do not.While flexible working was, in many cases, designed to support working mothers, utilization of flexibility programs, especially working from home, can backfire and exacerbate inequality on the homefront.
  • Men who achieve egalitarian caregivingarrangements tend to be those thatcontribute less than half of the family income and / or have a spouse that works at least 50 hours per week.While there may be some good news here, it isn’t much comfort to mothers who need to work long hours in the workplace in order to get relief at home.
  • Men and women who perceive themselves in counter-stereotypical waysare more likely to achieve caregiver equalitythan those who identify with more stereotypically gendered traits.Using an adaptedthat measures traditionally male and female characteristics, we identified personality traits associated with greater egalitarianism. Fathers who described themselves as especially warm were more likely to be a shared caregiver. Women, who responded that they always defend their own beliefs were also more likely to develop an egalitarian arrangement.
  • Men and women who believe their work role is amenable to work-family balanceare more likely to achieve egalitarian caregiving arrangements than those who don’t.While workplace culture and supervisory support are important, it is the role itself that makes the biggest difference. One can work in a supportive environment but if the job doesn’t lend itself to a balanced life, then that impacts the likelihood of truly shared caregiving.

From our research, we’ve learned that being aConflicted Fatherserves no one’s interests at the end of the day - not the father’s, not the mother’s, and not the organizations the fathers work for. So, what can men do to achieve their goal of being a partner in caregiving? Put simply, take parental leave if it’s available, utilize the flexibility you are offered, advocate for a job role that helps you achieve work/life balance, and be intentional about your commitment to caregiving equally with your spouse - no matter who earns more or works longer hours.

Make this Father’s Day a time to reflect and act on what is most important to you. I’m not in the habit of offering unsolicited advice, but just this once, let me suggest that doing so may yield a more meaningful life … and perhaps even a better shot at wedded bliss.

is the executive director of theand a research professor in the Carroll School of Management at Boston College.

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