The ‘shecession’: why economic crisis is affecting women more than men
From February to May, 11.5 million women lost their jobs [...]
From February to May, 11.5 million women lost their jobs [...]
Domestic-violence survivors often use cash infusions as a springboard toward [...]
New survey data show pandemic may be disproportionately influencing women [...]
Nearly four million U.S. undergraduate college students are parents or guardians of children under the age of 18. These student parents, who already faced immense financial, child care, food, and housing insecurity before the COVID-19 pandemic, are now dealing with multiple new barriers, including school closures, lay-offs, and child care disruptions, among other challenges.
“Families are not okay,” one expert says. It’s making the [...]
By Alicia Adamczyk If Congress decides not to extend the [...]
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Lea Woods | 202-785-5100 | [...]
The economy added 4.8 million to non-farm payroll employment, according to the latest U.S. Bureau Employment Situation Release. Yet, while women gained the majority of new job, they continue to lag further behind men in terms of getting back to pre-COVID 19 employment levels.
In the United States, women now make up more than 50 percent of the workforce, reflecting growth in health care, education, and service sectors over the last decade. The decline of the wages and real earnings of all workers over time coupled with the rise in cost of living expenses, such as housing, means that the income and earnings of women are critical to the overall economic security and wellbeing of families.
DOWNLOAD REPORT As the Economy Starts to Grow [...]