Happy Mother's Day - paying the 'motherhood penalty'
						
		 
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		 [May 10, 2018] 
		 By Gail MarksJarvis 
		 
		CHICAGO - If mom arrives at this year’s 
		Mother’s Day gathering looking like she needs less stress and more 
		relaxation, resist the urge to tell her to leave her job. 
		 
		Study after study shows that women who leave the workforce, whether it 
		is to care for children or to retire early with a spouse, take a hefty 
		financial hit. 
		 
		The price women pay for raising a family has been dubbed the “motherhood 
		penalty," with numerous academic studies quantifying the impact in 
		thousands of dollars. 
		 
		Over a lifetime, mothers with one child earn 28 percent less than 
		childless women, according to a recent study led by Matthew Rutledge for 
		the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. For each 
		additional child, women lose another 3 percent. 
						
		
		  
						
		The sacrifice in dollars is startling. Women without children are paid a 
		median of $3,850 a month; mothers earn about $1,278 less each month, 
		according to Rutledge. 
		 
		That can leave women vulnerable in divorce and widowhood. Simply having 
		one child erodes a woman’s Social Security benefits by 16 percent, and 
		another 2 percent goes away with each additional child, according to 
		Rutledge. 
		 
		Since Social Security is a major source of retirement income for most 
		widows, losing 16 percent is significant. 
		 
		The motherhood penalty occurs when women leave jobs altogether or move 
		to part-time work for a period while raising children. Then, as they 
		re-enter the workforce, they find themselves behind on both pay and 
		career level. 
		 
		The impact is the worst for professional women, especially lawyers and 
		engineers, according to the U.S. Census. 
		 
		The good news: If women work long enough, they start closing the gap as 
		they hit their peak earnings years in their 50s and 60s, according to 
		research by Nicole Maestas, associate professor of health policy at 
		Harvard Medical School. 
						
		  
						
		The trouble is, however, that many married women do not give themselves 
		a chance to make up for the income they sacrificed as mothers, Maestas 
		said. They tend to retire at the same time as their spouses, even though 
		they are often younger. 
		 
		For about half of married women, retirement comes before age 62. That is 
		the age when some Social Security benefits start at a level that is 26.7 
		percent below the full retirement age – currently 66 years and 4 months. 
		 
		KEY WORKING YEARS 
		 
		These women cut themselves off from the key working years that allow 
		them to catch up on earnings along with future pension and Social 
		Security checks. 
						
		
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			A woman and a child look at miniature sailboats on Mother's Day in 
			Central Park, New York City, U.S., May 14, 2017. REUTERS/Joe Penney 
              
According to Maestas, women retiring at 62 give up almost $200,000 in pay, on 
average, that they could have earned on the job if they worked five more years 
and saved for retirement. In addition, retiring at age 62 cuts lifetime Social 
Security benefits. 
 
The reality hits many women when it is too late to make a difference. 
“I’ve seen horrific situations,” said Cindy Hounsell, president of the Women’s 
Institute for a Secure Retirement. 
 
Case in point: a couple Hounsell knows who thought they would be OK when they 
retired. They did not save for retirement, but rather thought they would depend 
on flipping houses – a plan that backfired with sharp losses during the 
financial crisis. 
 
The husband, 75, now has Parkinson’s while his wife has lung problems. They live 
on $48,000 in Social Security payments, based on his years running a small 
business along with the spousal benefits the wife receives. 
 
With no extra money for help, the wife must lift her husband in and out of the 
back seat of their car when they must go to medical visits. 
 
“They are living hand to mouth,” Hounsell said. 
Her message to younger women is: save for retirement starting in your 20s, even 
if finances are tight and you have no 401(k) or retirement savings plan through 
a job. 
  
“If you stay home to raise children, make sure your husband funds a Roth IRA 
fully for you each year," Hounsell said. 
 
Spouses with jobs or businesses can put as much as $5,500 into an IRA or Roth 
IRA each year for a non-working spouse. Roth IRAs during retirement are 
attractive because withdrawals are not taxed. 
 
And before retiring, maximize Social Security benefits. Said Hounsell: “When 
people first retire, they feel like everything will be OK, but then health 
problems happen, things you didn’t expect happen, and you need all the money you 
can get." 
 
(Editing by Lauren Young and Steve Orlofsky) 
				 
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