The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?

Objective: This paper examines how participation in the short-time work scheme affected the gendered division of child care during the COVID-19 crisis in Germany. Background: Short-time work (Kurzarbeit) has been one of the main policies used to combat the economic and labour market repercussion...

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Main Authors: Tabea Naujoks, Michaela Kreyenfeld, Sandra Dummert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bamberg Press 2021-09-01
Series:Journal of Family Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/717
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spelling doaj-b0238398f7294d8b9883b1e6299447572021-09-13T22:03:36ZengUniversity of Bamberg PressJournal of Family Research2699-23372021-09-0110.20377/jfr-717The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?Tabea Naujoks0Michaela Kreyenfeld1Sandra Dummert2Hertie SchoolHertie SchoolIAB Nürnberg Objective: This paper examines how participation in the short-time work scheme affected the gendered division of child care during the COVID-19 crisis in Germany. Background: Short-time work (Kurzarbeit) has been one of the main policies used to combat the economic and labour market repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic in Germany. We examine whether and, if so, how the growing prevalence of short-time work has affected care patterns. Method: We use data from the IAB-HOPP, a longitudinal study monitored by the German Institute for Employment Research (IAB). The analytical sample includes couples with children aged 12 and younger. We employ multinomial logistic regressions in which the outcome variable is the change in the division of care work from a period before to a period during the coronavirus crisis (June to October 2020). Results: We find that among men, receiving short-time work benefits resulted in more gender-equal care patterns. The positive effect of short-time work on the division of child care is moderated by the level of education. Fathers with low or medium education are more likely to increase their child care share when receiving short-time work benefits compared to fathers with high education. However, we also find that participating in the short-time work programme had no strong or significant effects on the gendered division of care among women. Conclusion: The evidence from this study suggests that men’s working time is a major vehicle to change the gendered division of care in couple households. https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/717father's involvementemploymentGermanygendered division of care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tabea Naujoks
Michaela Kreyenfeld
Sandra Dummert
spellingShingle Tabea Naujoks
Michaela Kreyenfeld
Sandra Dummert
The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
Journal of Family Research
father's involvement
employment
Germany
gendered division of care
author_facet Tabea Naujoks
Michaela Kreyenfeld
Sandra Dummert
author_sort Tabea Naujoks
title The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
title_short The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
title_full The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
title_fullStr The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
title_full_unstemmed The division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in Germany: How did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
title_sort division of child care during the coronavirus crisis in germany: how did short-time work affect fathers' engagement?
publisher University of Bamberg Press
series Journal of Family Research
issn 2699-2337
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Objective: This paper examines how participation in the short-time work scheme affected the gendered division of child care during the COVID-19 crisis in Germany. Background: Short-time work (Kurzarbeit) has been one of the main policies used to combat the economic and labour market repercussions of the coronavirus pandemic in Germany. We examine whether and, if so, how the growing prevalence of short-time work has affected care patterns. Method: We use data from the IAB-HOPP, a longitudinal study monitored by the German Institute for Employment Research (IAB). The analytical sample includes couples with children aged 12 and younger. We employ multinomial logistic regressions in which the outcome variable is the change in the division of care work from a period before to a period during the coronavirus crisis (June to October 2020). Results: We find that among men, receiving short-time work benefits resulted in more gender-equal care patterns. The positive effect of short-time work on the division of child care is moderated by the level of education. Fathers with low or medium education are more likely to increase their child care share when receiving short-time work benefits compared to fathers with high education. However, we also find that participating in the short-time work programme had no strong or significant effects on the gendered division of care among women. Conclusion: The evidence from this study suggests that men’s working time is a major vehicle to change the gendered division of care in couple households.
topic father's involvement
employment
Germany
gendered division of care
url https://ubp.uni-bamberg.de/jfr/index.php/jfr/article/view/717
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