AARP Hearing Center

En español | Most women, at some point in their lives, will care for a family member who has a chronic illness or condition, suffers an injury, or becomes frail as they age. And the majority of these caregivers are doing more than helping their loved ones with the activities of daily living—they’re in the workforce too, employed full- or part-time.
Due to the economic recovery in the wake of the pandemic, the broader trajectory of women in the workforce has appeared quite positive. Women’s labor force participation is surging, with employment of so-called prime-age women (those ages 25–54) back to pre-pandemic levels.
However, lurking just below the surface of this seemingly good news is a big problem at the intersection of caregiving and financial stability for women. Recent research tells a story of caregiving’s financial downsides—made more severe by the effects of deep-rooted challenges to financial stability for women as a whole—creating an endemic, underreported condition of hardship.
Longstanding Inequality
Long-term financial insecurity among women is not a new problem. Let’s look at the obstacles women face at different points in their life:
When a young woman gets her first job, she often earns less than her male counterparts. This gender pay gap persists and compounds over time. Overall, women earn an average of 82 cents for every dollar earned by men, and the gap is even larger for Black and Latina women (62 cents and 54 cents, respectively). To start a family, many women cut back on their work hours, forgoing promotions or other opportunities, or leaving the workforce entirely.
Financially, this decision has ripple effects. Reduced earnings again lead to lower savings. Down the road, this means lower Social Security benefits since those are based on lifetime income. If or when she decides to return to full-time in her current job or re-enter the workforce, she is now years behind her male colleagues in terms of position, earnings, and savings. It all adds up to a pernicious inversion of compounding interest—a curse of compounding losses.
What Caregiving Takes
Now, add caregiving into the mix. A recent AARP poll in the state of New York found that most working women caregivers have adjusted their work schedule to make more time for caring—they go into work early or late or take time off. At least one in five have taken a leave of absence from their job, reduced their work hours, or given up working altogether.
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