What Working Women Can Learn from the Era of “Leave It to Beaver”
鈥淓verywhere, children of working parents are being left without adequate supervision or restraint鈥濃攂ecause their parents (or, more to the point, their mothers) are working instead of staying home to care for them. Left to their own devices, so goes this theory, children are sure to do things like set fires and play in traffic.
If you鈥檙e thinking that sounds like a throwback attitude from the 1950s, you鈥檇 be right. The quote and the images come from the 聽鈥,鈥 a government-funded newsreel designed to encourage all the women who entered the workforce during the Second World War to return to the domestic sphere.
Yet while the days of propaganda in black-and-white are behind us, the question of how government should or should not provide support to working families is more urgent than ever. Sixty percent of families do not have a stay-at-home parent, and almost 70 percent of mothers and over 90 percent of fathers are. Today, many of those women and men are pushing for more progressive workplace policies鈥攑aid family leave, paid sick leave, a higher minimum wage and flexible working arrangements. Where can they turn for inspiration?
It may seem counterintuitive, but they can start by looking just a bit further back than the 1950s鈥攖o the,known popularly as the Lanham Act. Passed to fund public works in communities with defense industries, the law funded universal and affordable care for children under 12 for up to six days a week at centers that provided a low student-teacher ratio, meals, and enrichment activities.
鈥淲hat we often forget is [that] back in the 1940s, when Rosie the Riveter was working and she was a mother, we鈥檇 figured out how to have universal, affordable, high-quality child care,鈥 said Brigid Schulte, who spoke (and screened 鈥淢odern Woman鈥) at a recent event at 国产视频 with AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Liz Schuler, 国产视频 President and CEO Anne-Marie Slaughter, and Jay Newton-Small, Breadwinning & Caregiving Fellow and author of the forthcoming book, Broad Influence: How Women Are Changing the Way America Works. 鈥淲e have a majority of women who work in this country. We have a majority of mothers who work in this country. We have a majority of children in this country who are being raised by either dual-income working parents or by single parents,鈥 Schulte continued.
The message that 鈥渨e鈥檝e done this before鈥濃攖hat is, develop systems of government and business support for women and working families鈥攈its home for Shuler, who is the first woman in her position and the youngest officer ever to sit on the AFL-CIO鈥檚 executive council. 鈥淯nions have done this before,鈥 she emphasized. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to provide workers the support to have flexible jobs that still have benefits.鈥 Because the AFL-CIO鈥檚 membership straddles multiple sectors of the economy鈥攆rom plumbers to professional athletes to teachers鈥斺渨e really have a window into work,鈥 she noted. She added that despite unions鈥 reputation as being male-dominated spaces, 鈥淲e often say that collective bargaining is the best way to get pay equity for women.鈥
Facing all-time lows in membership and the expansion of the gig economy, however, Shuler also acknowledged that as much as the labor movement should look back to lessons of the past, it should also embrace the future. 鈥淲hether you鈥檙e working at a tattoo parlor or at Gawker, anyone can, in theory, join a union. It鈥檚 a matter of making a union fit the way you work and the way your workplace functions. And I think that something we need to do in the labor movement is look in the mirror a little bit, because we鈥檝e had a traditional mindset for how unions should operate. And as the economy is changing and as the workplace is changing, we need to think about how we can be more relevant to workers today,鈥 such as by bargaining for things like severance pay for workers who aren鈥檛 expecting to be at a company for decades.
Shuler also pointed to the AFL-CIO鈥檚 campaign to engage millennial workers and cited the AFL-CIO鈥檚 efforts to get more involved in the tech sector in Silicon Valley. For Shuler, another teachable example from labor history that applies to the growing gig economy is the guild model for seasonal work and portable benefits. 鈥淭he work ebbs and flows, but you need a consistent way to deliver that safety net for working people,鈥 she said. 鈥淟abor and management come together, they form a fund or a labor management trust to deliver鈥 benefits like healthcare, pensions, and 鈥渕ore certainty around work and how it鈥檚 delivered.鈥 It鈥檚 working now, Schuler pointed out, in industries like construction and entertainment. 鈥淪o can we use that as a model for an Uber driver?鈥
A potential coalition between the tech industry and unions would be one way for both the gig economy and the labor movement to thrive, observed Slaughter, who also stressed the need 鈥渢o differentiate between the high-end gig economy and the low-end gig economy.鈥 Unlike lawyers or coders or engineers who work flexibly, the Uber driver鈥攅ven if the flexibility allows her to work while her kids are in school鈥攊s 鈥渘ot getting benefits. She鈥檚 not earning enough money to help put her kids through college later, she鈥檚 not providing for her retirement.鈥 Slaughter reiterated that the gig economy, while a 鈥減otential godsend in terms of the flexibility,鈥 will 鈥渙nly work if we can create portable benefits, prorated benefits, and universal benefits.鈥
And to her mind, it鈥檚 crucial to devise policy solutions to implement such benefits, because 鈥渢he gig economy is the first wave of a truly digital economy 鈥 digital manufacturing is going to revolutionize the way we make things and where we make things.鈥 For this reason鈥攏ot to mention Congressional recalcitrance on these issues鈥擲laughter also highlighted the importance of states like California and cities like Cincinnati and Washington, D.C., as 鈥渓aboratories of democracy鈥 where portable benefits and paid family or sick leave 鈥攁苍诲鈥攊mplemented successfully. For instance, she always tells people she meets across the country, 鈥淚 live in New Jersey. We have paid family leave. It鈥檚 a social insurance scheme. It costs pennies on the dollar. You can do this!鈥
That isn鈥檛 to dismiss the role of the federal government, however. Slaughter mentioned Britain鈥檚 giving all workers the right to demand flexibility as one example of how the U.S. government could improve working families鈥 lives and break down the division between the gig economy and more traditional employment structures. Acknowledging the 鈥済rassroots power鈥 of localities and the limitations imposed by federal partisan gridlock, Shuler nonetheless 鈥渟till believe[s] that an undergirding of federal law that sets a floor and a standard that we can then improve upon at the state and local level is the way to go, the way we did with safety laws.鈥 For issues like paid family and medical leave and pay equity, 鈥渨e cannot ignore the power of the federal government speaking out on that.鈥
When it comes to women and work, the bottom line remains that women 鈥渁re not advancing the way they should be at the top, the middle, and the bottom of the income scale,鈥 said Slaughter, whose recent book, Unfinished Business, examines in depth why this is true even half a century into the contemporary women鈥檚 movement. And, as Newton-Small pointed out, finishing the business of the women鈥檚 movement when it comes to labor isn鈥檛 just about equality鈥攊t鈥檚 an economic imperative. By 2030, with the retirement of the baby boomer generation, 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to see a shortfall of about 26 million workers in America,鈥 she said. Bringing women up to full participation in the workforce will not only address this looming labor shortage, but it will also, according to the International Monetary Fund, increase GDP in the U.S. by five percent (in rural areas, by as much as 27 percent). Observed Newton-Small, 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a huge economic incentive to get women into the workforce.鈥
Shuler agreed. At the end of the day, she said, it鈥檚 about giving women a voice in their workplaces鈥攅ven if that isn鈥檛 through union membership. She gave the example of the 鈥淩espect the Bump鈥 campaign, in which employees of Wal-Mart organized against pregnancy discrimination. 鈥淪o they actually came together, raised hell at the shareholders鈥 meeting and got the policy changed,鈥 she recalled. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 collective voice鈥攁苍诲 whether it鈥檚 a union or something different, it鈥檚 about coming together.鈥 Shuler sees an important new role going forward for organizations like hers. 鈥淚 think the union movement can play a role in helping women outside unions negotiate, because we do that for a living.鈥
Working women have come a long way since the 1950s, a time when, as Newton-Small marveled, 鈥渘early every state in the union had laws [requiring married women] to get a husband鈥檚 permission to work.鈥 But they shouldn鈥檛 neglect the possibility that they should look back to find ways to get ahead. As recently as last year, in a study by, research has shown that parents and children drew a broad array of benefits from the provision of childcare through the Lanham Act鈥攊t expanded women鈥檚 labor force participation and improved children鈥檚 educational and employment outcomes all the way through adulthood. Not a bad history lesson, all told.