Balancing Work and Family: Promoting Equitable Responsibilities to Support Organizational Perform...
Abstract: Despite women's increasing participation in the workforce, research consistently shows they continue to bear disproportionate responsibility for caregiving and emotional labor within families compared to men. This persistent imbalance creates significant challenges for women's career advancement and for organizations seeking to retain female talent. The article examines how this gendered division of domestic labor negatively impacts both individual employees and organizational outcomes, providing evidence that women spend substantially more time on childcare and housework than men, even when both partners work full-time. These disparities contribute to motherhood wage penalties, reduced career opportunities, and higher attrition rates for women in the workplace. The article concludes by offering practical recommendations for organizations to promote more equitable sharing of family responsibilities across genders, including flexible work arrangements, comprehensive family leave policies, manager training, and addressing implicit biases—strategies that can simultaneously improve work-life integration for employees and enhance organizational performance.