4.3 Article

Participation in Job-Related Training: Is There a Parenthood Training Penalty?

Journal

WORK EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIETY
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 274-292

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/09500170221128692

Keywords

adult education; childbirth; family work; fixed-effects; further training; gender inequalities; labour market inequalities; maternal employment; parenthood

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This study aims to examine the impact of gendered parenthood on participation in non-formal further job-related training and finds that parenthood training penalties are particularly pronounced for mothers and less so for fathers. The results highlight the importance of training opportunities in reducing childbirth-related inequalities.
Gender inequalities in paid and unpaid work are well documented, but patterns of advantage or disadvantage in further job-related training have been less explored. Previous cross-sectional studies indicate gender differences in further training, with lower participation rates and shorter training sessions for women, especially mothers. Based on the National Educational Panel Study for Germany (adult cohort, 2008-2020), this study is the first to examine gendered parenthood effects on participation in non-formal further job-related training using panel analyses. The results from fixed-effects regressions provide evidence of parenthood training penalties that are particularly pronounced for mothers and in the first years after childbirth. While fatherhood training penalties are mostly explained, motherhood gaps remain robust when accounting for a large number of time-varying characteristics. The results point towards further relevant changes in mothers' aspirations or employer support. Thus, they underline the importance of training opportunities for reducing childbirth-related inequalities later in life.

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