Work and Family: Introducing the Issue

4区 法学 Q1 Social Sciences
J. Waldfogel, S. McLanahan
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

This issue of The Future of Children describes the challenges parents face in taking care of family responsibilities while also holding down a job and explores the implications of those challenges for child and family well-being. As children grow and develop, parents are the hub in a system of care to meet their needs, a system that includes extended family, preschools, schools, health care providers, community organizations, and others, but in which parents play the lead role. Often these same working parents have additional care responsibilities for other family members--in particular, the elderly--and are, for them too, the hub around which other caregivers, services, and programs revolve. Work-family challenges are as varied as the families that must deal with them, and they change in nature over time. Some working parents are better positioned than others to meet their family's care needs because they have higher incomes, more access to informal support from family members and others, or more support from employers or public policies. But no families, even middle- and high-income families, are immune from the challenge of balancing work and family obligations. Employers' needs and capacities are tremendously varied as well, particularly given the large role in the U.S. labor market of small, often family-owned businesses. Such wide variation suggests that meeting the work-family challenge will require flexibility and an array of options, rather than a one-size-fits-all approach. The rising shares of women in the workforce and of families headed by single parents have made work-family issues especially prominent and challenging, as more employees, both men and women, face care responsibilities at home and fewer have a stay-at-home spouse to manage them. The work-family challenge has also been heightened by an increase in longevity that has boosted the share of the population that is elderly. Although many elderly Americans are healthy (and indeed provide assistance to their adult children and grandchildren), others require care and support from their family members. Although these demographic trends have been observed to some extent in every modern economy, the challenges of meeting work and family obligations are particularly problematic in the United States. Simply put, U.S. work and family policies have not been updated to reflect the new reality of American family life. The social welfare system in the United States, more so than in other countries, is designed around the idea that government assistance is a last resort, provided only after families have first used available family, community, and employer supports, or in cases where such supports do not exist. Economists generally endorse limited government involvement but identify several types of situations where government may need to step in. For example, in cases where the benefits of a policy would accrue not just to the individual family or employer but to society more generally, it is in the public's interest for government to provide those benefits. That principle is the rationale for universal public education, where the United States has historically been a world leader, although its edge in higher education is eroding and it has fallen behind other countries in preschool education. In other situations, private insurance markets may not be able to cover a particular risk, necessitating public provision of social insurance. Social Security, for example, helps ensure that elders have adequate incomes; Medicare (and Medicaid) ensures that elders have health insurance coverage; and the Older Americans Act provides in-home services such as Meals on Wheels. These federal programs recognize the limits of family, community, or employer support for the elderly and fill in the gaps. The U.S. system of public supports for families with children or families with elderly relatives who need more care is typically less well developed than the systems in other advanced countries, and U. …
工作与家庭:介绍问题
本期《儿童的未来》描述了父母在维持工作的同时承担家庭责任所面临的挑战,并探讨了这些挑战对儿童和家庭福祉的影响。随着孩子的成长和发展,父母是满足他们需求的照顾系统的中心,这个系统包括大家庭、幼儿园、学校、卫生保健提供者、社区组织等,但父母在这个系统中起着主导作用。通常,这些工作的父母还要承担额外的照顾其他家庭成员的责任——尤其是老年人——对他们来说,他们也是其他照顾者、服务和项目的中心。工作与家庭的挑战是多种多样的,就像必须应对这些挑战的家庭一样,它们的性质随着时间的推移而变化。一些有工作的父母比其他人更有能力满足家庭的护理需求,因为他们有更高的收入,更容易获得家庭成员和其他人的非正式支持,或者来自雇主或公共政策的更多支持。但是,没有一个家庭,即使是中等收入和高收入家庭,能够免于平衡工作和家庭责任的挑战。雇主的需求和能力也千差万别,尤其是考虑到美国劳动力市场上的小型、通常是家族企业的巨大作用。如此广泛的差异表明,应对工作与家庭的挑战需要灵活性和一系列选择,而不是一刀切的方法。女性在劳动力市场和单亲家庭中所占比例的上升,使得工作与家庭的问题变得尤为突出和具有挑战性,因为越来越多的员工,无论男女,都要承担照顾家庭的责任,而很少有全职的配偶来管理他们。寿命的延长也加剧了工作与家庭之间的矛盾。寿命的延长提高了老年人口的比例。虽然许多美国老年人身体健康(并且确实为他们的成年子女和孙辈提供帮助),但其他人需要家人的照顾和支持。尽管这些人口趋势在某种程度上在每个现代经济体中都有所体现,但在美国,履行工作和家庭义务的挑战尤其严重。简单地说,美国的工作和家庭政策还没有更新,以反映美国家庭生活的新现实。与其他国家相比,美国的社会福利制度是围绕这样一种理念设计的,即政府援助是最后的手段,只有在家庭首次使用了现有的家庭、社区和雇主的支持之后,或者在这些支持不存在的情况下才会提供。经济学家普遍支持政府的有限干预,但也指出了政府可能需要介入的几种情况。例如,如果一项政策的好处不仅会给个人家庭或雇主带来好处,而且会给整个社会带来好处,那么政府提供这些好处是符合公众利益的。这一原则是普及公共教育的基本原理,尽管美国在高等教育方面的优势正在削弱,在学前教育方面也落后于其他国家,但美国在这方面一直处于世界领先地位。在其他情况下,私人保险市场可能无法覆盖特定风险,因此需要公共提供社会保险。例如,社会保障有助于确保老年人有足够的收入;医疗保险(和医疗补助)确保老年人享有健康保险;《美国老年人法案》提供上门服务,如送餐上门服务。这些联邦计划认识到家庭、社区或雇主对老年人的支持是有限的,并填补了空白。与其他发达国家相比,美国对有孩子的家庭或有老年亲属的家庭的公共支持体系通常不那么发达,而美国. ...
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来源期刊
Future of Children
Future of Children Multiple-
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期刊介绍: The Future of Children is a collaboration of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and the Brookings Institution. The mission of The Future of Children is to translate the best social science research about children and youth into information that is useful to policymakers, practitioners, grant-makers, advocates, the media, and students of public policy. The project publishes two journals and policy briefs each year, and provides various short summaries of our work. Topics range widely -- from income policy to family issues to education and health – with children’s policy as the unifying element. The senior editorial team is diverse, representing two institutions and multiple disciplines.
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