According to new research, full-time female employment in the UK has actually increased during the pandemic.

It’s no secret that the pandemic has upended the careers of countless women. With female-dominated industries like retail and hospitality bearing the brunt of numerous lockdowns and thousands of job losses – not to mention many women having to balance full-time careers with childcare and other unpaid domestic labour – early evidence suggested that women were set to face a she-cession owing to the impact of Covid-19.
But according to new research from the Resolution Foundation, women’s working hours were not as hard hit by the pandemic as initially predicted. In fact, according to the thinktank’s quarterly labour market report, women’s average working hours in the UK have declined far less than men’s over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic.
The employment rate among men has fallen by 2.4% since the start of the crisis, compared to a less dramatic decline of 0.8% for women. Meanwhile, full-time female employment has actually increased over the course of the pandemic – with the average woman without children working more than her pre-pandemic hours by the start of 2021.
Overall, the fall in women’s total hours worked has been around a third smaller than that of men’s. Resolution Foundation said that this was partly due to women making up 70% of the workforce in the public sector, including education and health, where employment has remained relatively stable.
But things looked decidedly different for working mothers. When businesses began to reopen last July but schools remained closed, the report found that mothers’ working hours were down by 24% on their pre-pandemic level – four times larger than those of fathers, whose hours were down 6%.
While this gap had mostly closed by January, 18% of mothers said they had adjusted their working patterns to accommodate childcare or home schooling, compared with 13% of fathers.
Following news that over half a million Brits won’t return to the office full-time after the pandemic, the thinktank also found that fewer women than men had a desire to return to full-time roles.
“The overall impact of the crisis has been much more equal between the genders than expected,” Hannah Slaughter, an economist at the Resolution Foundation, told The Guardian.
“But with the crisis still with us, and the future of home working unclear, the lasting gender impact of the crisis is still highly uncertain.”
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