As companies push for return-to-office mandates, working mothers could end up paying the price

For Mari Escamilla, the push and pull of work and family life can feel like a tug of war. When she isn’t working her full-time marketing job, she’s taking care of her 7-month-old daughter and 2-year-old son while trying to run a household with her husband.

It’s a feeling millions of working moms in the U.S. grapple with — a feeling that was exacerbated by the closure of school and childcare centers at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. And while women left the workforce en masse during the pandemic, many with college degrees and white-collar jobs stayed or have returned since, including Escamilla.

She, like so many working moms, credits work flexibility. Escamilla says the widespread adoption of remote and hybrid work in corporate America — as a result of the pandemic — helped her remain in the workforce in recent years.

“I didn’t realize it previously to having children or the pandemic, but now that I’ve lived it and I see it, it [work flexibility] will always be important to me,” Escamilla says. “If I don’t have that flexibility, then it doesn’t work with my life, realistically.”

The number of women in the workforce reached a record high this year, with an unexpected group leading the charge: mothers with young children. A report from the Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution found 70.4 percent of women with children under age 5 were in the workforce as of June 2023, up from 68.9 percent pre-pandemic.

Mari Escamilla headshot
Mari Escamilla headshot

“Not only have mothers with young children rebounded to their 2019 levels of participation, they have far exceeded them,” says Lauren Bauer, a fellow in Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution and co-author of the report.

Bauer adds that hot labor market conditions are likely contributing to the uptick, but so is flexible work. But it’s possible that progress could stall if companies continue adopting rigid return-to-work mandates.

“You’ve got this soup of women making different decisions, the labor market being really conducive to people finding jobs … and structural changes in the labor market around telework and flexibility that could all be contributing factors to the change in participation we’re seeing,” Bauer says.

Key takeaways

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  • There are more moms with young children in the workforce than ever before. 70.4% of women with children under age 5 were in the workforce as of June 2023, up from 68.9% pre-pandemic, according to a report from the Hamilton Project at the Brookings Institution.

  • Working moms support remote or hybrid work at higher rates. A recent Bankrate survey found 77% percent of full-time working women with children under 18 support a hybrid work schedule, and 74% of working women with children under 18 support working from home. On average, 68% of working Americans support hybrid work and 64% support remote work.

  • Working moms are more willing to make career sacrifices for flexibility. Seventy-eight percent of working women with children under 18 are willing to make sacrifices for a hybrid work schedule, and 83 percent are willing to make sacrifices for remote work, according to a Bankrate survey.