Parental Leave and Career Trajectories of Men and Women in Austria


PARENTAL LEAVE AND CAREER TRAJECTORIES OF MEN AND WOMEN IN  AUSTRIA

Funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWTF)  

Career interruptions due to childbirth and subsequent parental leave are the quantitatively most important driver of gender differences in earnings. Even after mothers return to the labor market, they often work fewer hours and take up lower-paying jobs compared to their earlier employment.

In this project, we investigate leave choices of parents and examine how parental leave policies can shape leave-taking. Our analysis contributes to a better understanding of the gender gap in leave-taking, its consequences on work careers of mothers and fathers, and potential improvements in policy.

PROJECT DESCRIPTION

Our project consists of three parts that investigate recent parental leave choices in Austria. We combine a number of relevant administrative datasets at the new Austrian Micro Data Center (AMDC) in a novel way to assess the leave-taking patterns of women and men and their consequences for future labor market outcomes such as employment and wages. Moreover, we examine to what extent financial incentives, career concerns, and social norms can explain parental leave choices.

First, we descriptively analyze recent patterns in parental leave take-up of mothers and fathers in Austria, providing a detailed characterization of parents who are most likely to take shorter and extended leave spells. Moreover, we can quantify the consequences of leave-taking for future labor market outcomes for individuals themselves and their partners.

To learn about the importance of additional leave incentives for fathers, we examine the effects of a recent change in paternity leave policy. In March 2017, Austria introduced a one-month parental leave scheme tailored to fathers right after childbirth, colloquially referred to as ‘daddy month’. We evaluate the overall take-up of this new scheme and analyze its impact on employment and earnings of parents.

In the second part of the project, we assess how financial and career considerations affect parental leave choices of fathers. Financial incentives differ markedly between low- and high-earning parents, and we use income data provided by the AMDC to estimate how these incentives affect take-up rates. Linking fathers to workplaces further enables us to analyze if competition effects among coworkers deter fathers from taking leave.

The third part of our project investigates the role of social norms. The AMDC includes detailed data on several person characteristics that we employ to proxy attitudes towards family and gender issues. This allows us to examine to what extent the effectiveness of parental leave policies depends on the social norms and attitudes of families.

TEAM:

Alice Kügler (Principal Investigator)

Lennart Ziegler (Co-Principal Investigator)

Omar Bamieh (Co-Principal Investigator)

Candan Erdemli (Post-doctoral Researcher)