Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月31日
Women are worrying about short-term childcare costs more than long-term retirement savings and losing tens of thousands as a result
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文章探讨了女性退休薪资差异的原因,包括性别薪资差距、母职惩罚等长期问题,以及在做是否离开职场的决定时,对长期规划的忽视。还提到了母亲在权衡时,往往更关注眼前的育儿成本,而忽视了对退休储蓄的影响,强调应考虑长期因素。

🎈性别薪资差距和母职惩罚使得有孩子的女性薪资低于男性及无孩的同事,这是导致退休薪资差异的部分原因。

🤔近五分之一考虑离职回家带孩子的母亲,在做决定时未考虑对退休储蓄的潜在影响,而仅有三分之一拥有大学学历的女性深入思考了离职对退休储蓄的影响。

👩‍🏭母亲在权衡是否离开职场时,更关注眼前的育儿成本,但长期来看,留在职场能积累更多退休储蓄。如一位年薪6万的母亲,离职两年,65岁时退休储蓄将少3.8万美元;离职五年,将少近10万美元。

💼54%的受访女性宁愿留在现职,也不愿换高薪但育儿成本也高的工作,实际上从长远看,选择高薪工作更有利。

Much of that divide can be attributed to long-standing issues like the gender pay gap and the so-called motherhood penalty, where women with children generally earn lower salaries than their male counterparts and coworkers (both male and female) without kids.But the retirement discrepancy also stems from more subtle attitudes around long-term planning. In fact, nearly one in five mothers who have considered stepping out of the workforce to stay home with their children say they didn’t even consider the potential hit to their retirement savings when weighing the decision, according to a recent survey of about 1,500 mothers conducted on behalf of TIAA. Just over a third of women with a college degree reported putting a lot of thought into how staying at home would affect their retirement savings, versus a full 50% who put a lot of thought into childcare costs.Read more: Childcare crisis: How men and employers can combat ‘time poverty’ for working mothers“When you make a choice about returning to labor force or not, it’s actually a big enough decision financially, that it’s one where you should really dive in,” says Emily Oster, an economist and professor at Brown University, as well as the author of a twice-weekly newsletter, ParentData, focused on on pregnancy and parenting. So often, mothers say they run the numbers and ask themselves what’s the point of working when all of their after-tax income is going to childcare, Oster says. And that may be true. “But I think what that misses is that a retained attachment to the labor force means more income later,” she says. Childcare costs do go down over time, yet that extra time in the workforce, for many people, means you’re accruing more retirement savings.When mothers weigh the choice to leave the workforce, childcare costs are the immediate concern, Oster says. That makes sense, but it doesn’t mean parents considering a break from the workforce shouldn’t also consider longer-term factors as well. When it comes to long-term financial security, like having a robust retirement savings balance, taking small steps over time adds up. Take the example of a mother who makes $60,000 and contributes just 3% of her income to her retirement. If she takes off two years, it could result in $38,000 less in retirement savings by the time she hits 65, according to a recent joint white paper published by Oster and TIAA. Five years out of the workforce? That would result in nearly $100,000 less in retirement savings for that same mother, assuming a 7% rate of return. Or take the fact that 54% of women surveyed reported they’d rather stay at their current job than switch to a job with higher pay, but also higher childcare costs. Running the numbers shows that taking the higher salary will ultimately be the better deal—despite the potential for short-term pain. “All these things sort of stack up,” Oster says. Retirement is so far off that it doesn’t come up for a lot of parents weighing their financial options after having a baby, Oster says, but adds then she will hear people say later, “I wish I knew that before, or I wish I had considered that.”“Take a step back, look at the big picture—it may well be more financially beneficial to stay in the labor force,” Oster says. It doesn’t mean that everybody should always keep working for this reason, but only focusing on short-term gains may leave some parents with regrets. Learn how to navigate and strengthen trust in your business with The Trust Factor, a weekly newsletter examining what leaders need to succeed. Sign up here.

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退休差异 长期规划 育儿成本 职场选择
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