Soon after Jay Z welcomed his first child, Blue Ivy Carter, last year,
a poem the rapper had reportedly dedicated to his new baby girl zipped around
the Internet. “Before I got in the game, made a change, and got rich / I
didn’t think hard about using the word B----,” it opened. “I rapped, I
flipped it, I sold it, I lived it / now with my daughter in this
world / I curse those that give it.” The poem turned out to be a hoax, but
a spate of recent research backs the idea that close relationships with women
can dramatically sway men’s attitudes and behavior, at home and at work, for
better and for worse:
Male CEOs typically pay their employees less and themselves more after
having sons, but this trend doesn’t hold with daughters. In fact, male CEOs
with firstborn daughters actually pay their employees more, giving female
employees the biggest raises [1].
Men who have daughters also grow less attached to traditional gender roles:
they become less likely to agree with the statement that “a woman’s place is in
the home,” for instance, and more likely to agree that men should wash dishes
and do other chores [2].
Having a sister, however, has the opposite effect, making men more
supportive of traditional gender roles, more conservative politically, and less
likely to perform housework [3].
Men with stay-at-home wives likewise favor a traditional division of labor.
They tend to disapprove of women in the workplace, judge organizations with
more female employees to be operating less smoothly, and show less interest in
applying to companies led by female executives. They also more frequently deny
promotions to qualified women [4].
Working with women, on the other hand, can encourage egalitarianism at
home. Men take on more housework after switching from a male-dominated
occupation, like construction or engineering, to a female-dominated one, like
nursing or teaching, even after controlling for changes in income and hours
[5].
But nontraditional career tracks don’t always mean nontraditional domestic
roles: men whose wives outearn them actually do a smaller share of housework
than their breadwinner peers [6].
Evidently, the takeaway for women who want advancement at work and
chore-sharing at home is this: work for a male CEO with lots of daughters, no
sisters, and a working wife, and marry a man with plenty of female colleagues
and a paycheck that’s bigger than yours.
The Studies:
[1] Dahl et al., “Fatherhood
and Managerial Style: How a Male CEO’s Children Affect the Wages of His
Employees” (Administrative Science Quarterly, Dec. 2012)
[2] Shafer and Malhotra, “The
Effect of a Child’s Sex on Support for Traditional Gender Roles” (Social
Forces, Sept. 2011)
[3] Healy and Malhotra,
“Childhood Socialization and Political Attitudes: Evidence From a Natural
Experiment” (The Journal of Politics, Oct. 2013)
[4] Desai et al., “The
Organizational Implications of a Traditional Marriage: Can a Domestic
Traditionalist by Night Be an Organizational Egalitarian by Day?”
(Kenan-Flagler Research Paper, March 2012)
[5] McClintock,
“Gender-Atypical Occupations and Time Spent on Housework: Doing Gender or Doing
Chores?” (presented at the annual meeting of the American Sociological
Association,
Aug. 2013)
Aug. 2013)
[6] Bertrand et al., “Gender
Identity and Relative Income Within Households” (NBER Working Paper, May 2013)
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