Discussion Papers 2101, 38 S.
Julia Schmieder, Doris Weichselbaumer, Clara Welteke, Katharina Wrohlich
2024
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Promoting fathers to take parental leave is seen as a promising way to advancegender equality. However, there is still a very limited understanding of its impact on fathers’ labor market outcomes. We conducted a correspondence study to analyze whether fathers who take parental leave face discrimination during the hiring process in three different occupations. Fathers who took parental leave in a female-dominated or gender-neutral occupation are not less likely to be invited to a job interview compared to fathers who did not take leave. However, in the male-dominated occupation, fathers who have taken long parental leave are penalized. Regardless of leave-taking, fathers are treated less favorably than mothers in the female-dominated and the gender-neutral occupation, while the opposite is true for the male-dominated occupation. This suggests the presence of strong gender norms concerning the perception of ideal employees in different occupations.
Topics: Inequality, Gender, Family, Labor and employment
JEL-Classification: C93;J13;J71
Keywords: discrimination, parental leave, gender, hiring, experiment