Part of why dads are doing more around the house may be that women are doing more in the workplace. A study from the Pew Research Center this month found that mothers are the breadwinners in a record 40 percent of families. At the same time, the number of stay-at-home dads is twice what it was 10 years ago — though still a relatively small number at 176,000. And in two-thirds of married couples with children younger than 18, both parents work, according to the U.S. Census.
As working moms increasingly become the norm, and as their financial contributions become more critical, they’re doing less cleaning and cooking. A Pew study released in March shows that since 1965, fathers have increased the amount of time they spend on household chores from four hours to 10 hours a week. Women still do more, but as dad’s share goes up, mom’s goes down: In the same time period, mothers reduced their housework from 32 hours a week to 18. Dads have also tripled the amount of time they spend with children since 1965, even though moms still put in about six more hours a week with kids than dads overall, according to the Pew study.
“There’s no question that guys are doing more, twice to three times as much, in fact — for couples working two full-time jobs and caring for children 6 and under — than in the 1970s,” said Arlie Hochschild, whose groundbreaking book “The Second Shift” documented how an earlier generation of women did the lion’s share of child care and housework even if they had jobs outside the home.
‘Dad is the new Mom’
Jay Fagan, a sociology professor at Temple University in Philadelphia and founding editor of the academic journal Fathering, says the inverse relationship between hours worked outside and inside the home makes sense: “When the mother is working full-time, it is impossible for her to do everything.” But there’s another aspect, too, he notes: “The more you earn, the more it buys you out of some of the mundane responsibilities.”