Working from home is good for women, families and business. Employers shouldn't be so eager to get workers back to the office.

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There was a bump in U.S. birth rates last year, and the flexibility of working from home during the pandemic could have been a factor, this columnist says. OPINION

A nation’s future economic prosperity rests in large part on the size of the next generation, yet not as many American women are having children, and those who do are having fewer. The replacement rate, or the number of children needed to keep a country’s population stable, is 2.1 births per woman; in the U.S. that figure is now 1.6.

Second, unmarried remote workers were more likely to get married than their work-in-person counterparts, with marriage generally leading to childbearing. Although it’s well-understood that economic prosperity and urbanization lead to lower birth rates, researchers are unsure why birthrates have fallen to such dire levels. Possible explanations include: more women with careers; a lack of affordable childcare; a drop in the marriage rate or later marriage, and fewer eligible men compared to educated women .Women’s participation in the workforce will remain vital to our continued economic prosperity, especially with a smaller population cohort. U.S.

Although there were many, many negatives in the pandemic, there were a few positives such as remote work. It allowed work hours and location to become more flexible, which survey after survey has shown is particularly important for working women — mothers or mothers to be.

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