NY Times Since Kerry Devine, 32, and her friends began having children, she has
noticed a stark difference between her female friends in Auburn, Wash.,
where she lives, and those in England and Cyprus, where she grew up. In
the United States, they almost all stopped working outside the home, at
least until their children were in school. Yet, she says, she can’t
think of a friend in Europe who left work after her children were born. [...]
Her story would have played out differently, she said, if she had been
living in her native England. Like many European countries, Britain
offers a year of maternity leave, much of it paid, and protections for
part-time workers, among other policies aimed at keeping women employed.
“I
would have been O.K. putting a 1-year-old baby in day care, but not a
12-week-old,” Ms. Devine said. “More flexible hours and being able to
work from home part of the time definitely would have made a big
difference.”
a
Her
thinking is shared by many American women — and plays a role in a
significant economic reversal. As recently as 1990, the United States
had one of the top employment rates in the world for women, but it has
now fallen behind many European countries. After climbing for six
decades, the percentage of women in the American work force peaked in
1999, at 74 percent for women between 25 and 54. It has fallen since, to
69 percent today. [...]
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