Research suggests people who work from home are having more babies
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Research suggests people who work from home are having more babies
"People who worked from home at least one day per week "had more biological children from 2021 to early 2025, and plan to have more children in the future, compared to observationally similar persons who do not" work from home, according to the August 2025 working paper, " Work from Home and Fertility." A team of researchers from Stanford University, Princeton University, and international institutes surveyed working arrangements, recent births, and future fertility intentions in 39 countries, including the United States, finding that women who worked from home at least once a week had an average of 0.039 more children than nonteleworking peers did since 2021."
""A similar result holds for American men," they found, though the association was not statistically significant for men in the multicountry sample. But in both the U.S. and other countries, male fertility was positively correlated with a spouse or partner's work-from-home status. And "when both partners [work from home] at least one day per week....total lifetime fertility is greater by 0.2 children" in the global sample, compared with couples where neither partner works from home."
"Researchers say working from home may make it easier to balance work and family, but note that "it's also plausible that parents with young children at home may select" work-from-home arrangements more often. Self-selection seems less of a confounding factor when it comes to future fertility intentions. In both the U.S. and multicountry samples, and for both men and women, working from home at least one day per week increased their preferred number of kids."
Surveys across 39 countries, including the United States, using data from 2021 to early 2025 link occasional remote work to higher recent births and stronger fertility intentions. Women who worked from home at least once weekly had an average of 0.039 more children since 2021 than nonteleworking peers. Male fertility correlated positively with a partner's remote work, with a similar U.S. result for men. When both partners teleworked at least one day per week, total lifetime fertility rose by 0.2 children in the global sample. Working from home may ease work–family balance, though parental self-selection into remote work could influence outcomes.
Read at Reason.com
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