homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Moms today spend twice as much time caring for their kids than in 1965. Dads quadruple that

You didn't think you were such a great parent, did you?

Tibi Puiu
September 30, 2016 @ 2:46 pm

share Share

mothers love

Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Virtually across the whole western world, today’s parents are spending considerably more time with their kids than 50 years ago, according to a University of California, Irvine study. Even more surprising was to find that high-earning, educated parents spent the most time child rearing out of the studied social groups, despite classic economics theory suggests earning more encourages individuals to spend less time with children and invest in babysitters.

You didn’t think you were such a great parent, did you?

Judith Treas, UCI Chancellor’s Professor of sociology, and Giulia M. Dotti Sani, a postdoctoral fellow at Collegio Carlo Alberto in Turin, Italy, mined the  Multinational Time Use Study Harmonized Simple Files dataset. The longitudinal study followed parents aged 18 to 65 living in households with at least one child under 13. Each parent had to keep a diary of their daily activities which involved raising their kids; things like preparing meals, changing diapers, reading bedtime stories, helping with homework and so on.

Since 1965, a total of 122,271 parents (68,532 mothers, 53,739 fathers) have taken part in the study. The countries included in the study were Canada, the U.K, the U.S., Denmark, Norway, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Slovenia.

To find out how much time parents in the 1960s, as well as in 2012, were spending raising their kids, the researchers picked a random day from each diary and tabulated the amount of time recorded for both interactive and routine child care activities.

According to the results, 2012 moms spent on average 104 minutes a day caring for their kids or almost twice as more than 1965 mothers who spent only 54 minutes. Fathers’ quality time with their children nearly quadrupled since 1965. Fathers now spend 59 minutes a day with kids, compared to a meager 16 minutes 1965 dads allocated.

“The time parents spend with children is regarded as critical for positive cognitive, behavioral and academic outcomes,” Treas said. “Contemporary fathers – having more egalitarian gender views – want to be more involved in their children’s lives than their own dads were. These beliefs have taken hold among the best-educated residents of Western countries and are also diffusing to their counterparts who have less schooling.”

After the researchers split the parents involved in the study into two groups — college graduates versus parents with no college degree — they found formal higher education was linked with a disposition to allocate more time for child rearing. College-educated moms spent an estimated 123 minutes daily on child care, compared with 94 minutes spent by less educated mothers. Fathers with a college degree spent about 74 minutes a day with their kids, while less educated dads averaged 50 minutes.

All the findings remained consistent for parents in virtually all the Western countries involved in the study, with one notable exception: France.

“No one is certain why the French are exceptional. Public spending on child care is fairly high in France, lightening parental responsibilities. Some experts speculate that the French simply believe children can accommodate successfully without parents making big changes to their lifestyles,” said Treas.

Findings appeared in the journal Journal of Marriage and Family

share Share

World's Oldest Water is 1.6 billion Years Old -- and This Scientist Tasted It

Apparently, it tastes 'very salty and bitter'.

New Dads’ Brains Light Up in Surprising Ways When They See Their Babies

New fathers’ brains respond uniquely to their own infants, tuning for care and connection.

Divers Pulled a Sphinx and Roman Coins From a 2,000-Year-Old Sunken City in Egypt

Archaeologists lift ancient treasures from Abu Qir Bay.

Heatwaves Don't Just kill People. They Also Make Us Older

Every year's worth of heatwaves could add about two weeks of aging to your body

Parked Dark-Colored Cars Are Like Mini Heat Islands That Make City Streets Several Degrees Hotter

The color of your car may be heating your street—and your city

Horned 'Zombie Rabbits' Spook Locals in Colorado But Scientists Say These Could Hold Secrets to Cancer

The bizarre infection could help cancer research.

Orange Cats Are Genetically Unlike Any Other Mammal and Now We Know Why

The iconic coats are due to a mutation not seen in other animals.

Giant solar panels in space could deliver power to Earth around the clock by 2050

A new study shows space solar panels could slash Europe’s energy costs by 2050.

Our Primate Ancestors Weighed Less Than an Ounce and Surprisingly Evolved in The Cold – Not The Tropics

New research overturns decades of assumptions about how – and where – our lineage began.

Frozen Wonder: Ceres May Have Cooked Up the Right Recipe for Life Billions of Years Ago

If this dwarf planet supported life, it means there were many Earths in our solar system.