Stay-at-home
dads on the rise
By Jessica
Dickler | CNNMoney.com
Before Jessica and Lance
Somerfeld had their baby, they decided it would make the
most financial sense for one of them to stay home to raise him. Since
Lance made a fraction of Jessica's earnings, he was the obvious choice.
With wages at a standstill and child
care costs skyrocketing, Somerfeld is just
one of a growing number of dads who are staying home with the kids.
Among
fathers with a wife in the workforce, 32% took care of their kids at least one
day a week in 2010, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, which looked at
families with children under 15 years old. That's up from 26% in 2002.
Of those
with kids under the age of 5, 20% of dads in 2010 were the primary caretaker.
Not only
has it become more necessary for men to pitch in at home, but fathers have also
become more available to do so. "It's a combination of mothers going to
work and fathers being out of work as a result of the recession," said
Lynda Laughlin, a family demographer at the Census Bureau.
Men were particularly hard hit by the steep
job losses during that time, losing 4
million jobs since 2007, while women lost just over 2 million during the same
time period, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
While
men have since gained back a majority of those jobs during the recovery, their
unemployment rate -- at 8.3% in March -- is still above the national average of
8.2%.
Moms: 'I can't afford to work'
Many
find that having one parent at home does have its advantages, especially as
child care costs continue to climb.
Couples
do the math and realize that it makes more financial sense for one spouse to
stay home with the kids. And while it's often the woman who decides to drop out
of the workforce, more men are taking on the responsibility of child care as
well.
A lot of
that has to do with who makes the most money in the household. Even though the
wage gap between the sexes persist, a growing number of women are out-earning
their husbands. In 2008, 26% of women living in dual-income households had
annual earnings that were at least 10 percentage points higher than their
spouse, up from 15% in 1997, according to the Families andWork Institute's
latest data.
As a New
York City school teacher, Somerfeld said he made a fraction of his wife's
salary. "She was probably making 80% of our household income and I was
20%," he said. Her career as a corporate actuary for an insurance company
"was on a really good track and it made more sense for me to stay
home."
But the
decision they made wasn't strictly a financial one. "Too often, we hear
that it's the economy that forces dads into these roles and that's certainly a
part of it, but I would love to shatter that stereotype," Somerfeld said.
"Being my son's primary caregiver is something I have truly cherished and
embraced and never looked back."
Three
years ago, Somerfeld started the NYC Dads group to connect with other fathers
in a similar position. The group now has over 550 members.
"There
are a lot of guys out there that had remote relationships with their own
fathers and they don't want that with their kids," added Jeremy Adam
Smith, a one-time stay-at-home dad and author of The Daddy Shift. "It's
not just stay-at-home dads -- fathers in general are participating more in
their children's lives."
Should I stay home or work after
the baby's born?
Regardless
of their employment status, nearly half of the men surveyed by Families and
Work Institute said they take most or an equal share of child care
responsibilities, up from 41% 20 years ago.
Just
don't call them "Mr. Moms," said Ellen Galinsky, president and
co-founder of the Families and Work Institute. "Like it's a female task,
I've never understood that."
Correction:
An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated the unemployment rate
among men as 8.9%. The seasonably adjusted
rate is 8.3%.
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