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For release on delivery
2:20 p.m. EDT (1:20 p.m. CDT)
August 17, 2022

Working Women in the Pandemic Era

Remarks by
Michelle W. Bowman
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
Arkansas Women’s Commission Meeting
Russellville, Arkansas

August 17, 2022

It’s a pleasure to be with you today to talk about a subject that I experience
directly—women’s labor force participation. 1 I come to this issue with a similar
perspective to this Commission, being from a heavily rural state and a small farming and
ranching community deep in the Flint Hills of Kansas. But I also have roots here in
Arkansas, my husband’s family is from Hardy, and my father’s mother was from Little
Rock. It’s really nice to be back in an area where I spent a lot of time growing up.
My husband and I returned home to Kansas with our two children under three in
late 2009, just as the impacts of the last financial crisis were making their way to rural
areas. At the time, I was a community banker, which means I was also a very active
member of the community. As I am sure many of you did then, I saw firsthand the
economic impacts of the recession and the increased drug and opioid use that devastated
many rural communities across the Midwest.
At that time, many in the community received benefits from well-intended
programs created to provide assistance, which often made it very difficult for small
employers to find employees. This was often because, as I learned when trying to hire
employees at our local chamber of commerce, the benefit from taking a job was much
less than the benefit one could receive from the government at that time while not
working. This is one major similarity between the current experience and the last
recession, except that in this episode, the benefits many received were far in excess of
what they could earn from working. So much so that the benefits provided to a large
number of Americans resulted in a significant increase in savings, which is only recently

These remarks reflect my views and not necessarily those of my colleagues on the Board of Governors
and the Federal Open Market Committee. I am grateful to Federal Reserve staff members Nick Carollo,
Wendy Dunn, Charles Fleischman and Stacey Tevlin for their assistance in preparing this text.

1

-2beginning to decline and likely leading many who had not yet decided to re-enter the
workforce to find work. These labor supply problems, as I will explain, are a large part
of women’s experience in the workforce since the pandemic, and the lesson from this and
other recessions is that policymakers need to carefully weigh all of the consequences of
their decisions.
It is fair to say that the majority of the economic conditions we are experiencing
today, like inflation, are different from those of the last financial crisis. But as I just
noted, there are some similarities in the impacts on the labor force.
Turning to the subject of my remarks today, I will discuss the role of women in
the U.S. economy, focusing on the period since the onset of COVID-19. 2 You may
already know that women suffered disproportionately more job losses than men during
the pandemic. This was the opposite of what happened in past recessions, when men lost
jobs at a higher rate than women. The difference this time has led some to call the 2020
downturn a “she-cession.” Most of the differences between how men and women fared
in the labor market during that time had reversed by 2021, but their different experiences
highlight how participation by men and women can sometimes be driven by different
forces.
The backdrop for recent events is the long history, starting after World War II, of
women gradually entering the labor market. Of course, women have always significantly
contributed to and played a large role in the U.S. economy, but initially in ways that don’t
show up in most government statistics. The rise of industrialization and the shift away
from an agrarian economy provided opportunities for men to work outside the home and
These remarks reflect my own views and not necessarily those of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System or the Federal Open Market Committee.

2

-3women took on more responsibility for cooking, sewing, child-rearing and other domestic
tasks. 3 We heard an echo of that history during the pandemic, because when schools
closed and other childcare was disrupted, women assumed the majority of those
caregiving responsibilities, which led many to quit their jobs and drop out of the labor
force. This magnified the effect by eliminating jobs in childcare resulting in even more
unemployment. But that wasn’t the only reason why women were impacted during this
episode.
Let me start with the big picture on the differences between men and women in
the labor market. Before 1950, few women worked outside the home and the majority of
those who did were unmarried. From 1950 to 1970, more women entered the workforce,
but many did not plan to work for the long term, and their investment in education and
training was often limited. 4 By the mid-1970s, barriers that limited opportunities for
women in many workplaces began to fall, and by 1990 the education gap between men
and women narrowed significantly. Women’s participation steadily increased from there
until the gains leveled off in the 1990s, but then rose again from 2015 to 2020, just before
the pandemic. The narrowing of educational attainment for men and women had a lot to
do with the narrowing of participation rates over the decades, and today women are more
likely than men to hold a bachelor’s degree. Even so, before the pandemic, overall
participation remained lower for women than men regardless of education level.

See Claudia Golden (2021), Career & Family: Women’s Century-Long Journey Toward Equity
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press).
4
See Claudia Goldin (2006), “The Quiet Revolution that Transformed Women’s Employment, Education,
and Family,” American Economic Review, vol. 96 (2), pp. 1–21.
3

-4The response to the COVID-19 pandemic caused the most abrupt decline in
employment in the history of this nation. 5 The lockdowns and other government
restrictions on businesses severely limited work, education, and travel. In February 2020,
over 60 percent of working-age people had a job or were looking for work, but by April it
was closer to half that amount. The pandemic hit all sectors of the economy, but the toll
was especially heavy on in-person, close-contact service industries—restaurants, hotels,
airline travel, and retail businesses other than big box stores, grocery stores and
pharmacies. These in-person service-industry jobs were considered more conducive to
spreading COVID-19, they were more affected by government-mandated shutdowns and
social distancing, and teleworking was generally not possible.
Unlike any previous recession, the downturn in employment fell more heavily on
women than men. The unemployment rates for men and women were essentially the
same before the pandemic but ended up much higher for women. 6 That was very
different from past recessions. For example, after the recession following the housing
crisis, unemployment for prime working age men rose to 11 percent, compared to only 9
percent for prime age women. 7
The women’s labor force participation rate is another way to measure their
presence in the workforce. Women have made significant progress in closing the gap
with men since the 1960s, including in the five years before the pandemic, but that gap

In just two months, the unemployment rate rose from 3.5 percent to 14.7 percent. While unemployment
was higher during the Great Depression of the 1930s, it never rose this quickly.
6
Unemployment rose to 16.1 percent for women but only 13.5 percent for men in April 2020.
7
The U.S. Department of Labor define prime age workers as those 25-54.
5

-5reopened after the onset of COVID-19. 8 The number of both prime working age men and
women in the labor force plunged, but the drop was half a million larger for women.
From what we know now, there appear to be two main reasons why the pandemic
downturn affected women more than men. First, even after the dramatic employment
gains over the past 50 years, women are still most often the primary caregivers to
children and other family members. They shouldered most of the childcare burden from
the COVID school closures. Second, a higher proportion of women worked in and
continue to be employed in positions in the high-contact service sectors that were hit
hardest by the pandemic.
Caregiving burdens in the United States have always fallen more heavily on
women. In the 20 years before the pandemic, roughly one-fourth of prime-age women
with children didn’t participate in the workforce. An even larger share of women with
children under five were primarily engaged in childcare. Many women with children
tend to cycle in and out of employment based on their family’s childcare demands.
Women are significantly affected by the summer childcare burdens of families with
children. Each year between May and July, when schools close for the summer, the
employment-to-population ratio for prime age women declines by more than a percentage
point and then rebounds when schools reopen in the fall. That difference is one-third of
the total drop that prime-age women experienced following a very bad recession, the one
following the housing crisis. 9

Part of the reason women closed the participation gap with prime working age men after 1965 is that
participation by this cohort of men gradually declined. Major reasons for this decline in prime age male
participation likely were increasing trade, globalization, and technological changes that reduced the number
of manufacturing jobs, which were held primarily by men.
9
See Brendan Price and Melanie Wasserman (2022), “The Summer Drop in Female Employment,” CESifo
Working Paper 9783 (Munich: CESifo, June), https://www.cesifo.org/DocDL/cesifo1_wp9783.pdf.
8

-6Today, working women still carry out most childcare responsibilities. One study
conducted before the pandemic found that when both parents work, women spend
50 percent more time on childcare than men. 10 And when the pandemic closed many
schools, it was largely women who stayed home. Women with children saw their labor
force participation rate and employment-to-population ratio fall more than for women
without children, while men were much less affected regardless of whether they had
children. According to one Federal Reserve study, increased caregiving burdens for
mothers with school aged children accounted for about three-fourths of the decline in
women in the labor force from February 2020 to August 2021 but only about one-third of
the decline for fathers. 11 Even after most children returned to in-person schooling,
caregiving continues to weigh on female participation in the labor force, likely because of
increased care for elderly or ill family members. 12
The other major factor affecting women during the pandemic was the larger
number of female employees in high-contact service-sector jobs, where demand dropped
sharply during the pandemic and the government-imposed restrictions in response to
COVID-19.
During past recessions, women experienced fewer job losses because servicesector jobs were more stable in downturns. Historically, goods-producing industries were
harder hit, and men, who tended to hold these roles, were more likely to lose their jobs. 13
But during the pandemic, it was service jobs that were more likely to be lost. Before the
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/10/01/women-more-than-men-adjust-their-careers-forfamily-life/
11
Montes, Joshua, Christopher Smith and Isabel Leigh. 2021. “Caregiving for Children and Parental Labor
Force Participation during the Pandemic.” FEDS Notes, Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System.
12
Montes, Smith and Leigh (2021.)
13
Albanese and Sahin (2018)
10

-7pandemic, more than 75 percent of these workers were women. Between February and
April 2020, service sector employment fell 40 percent. Job losses in other industries with
greater proportions of male workers, like manufacturing, were much smaller. We have
also seen recovery in service-sector jobs lag behind other sectors. Employment in
industries that tend to have larger shares of female workers, such as leisure and
hospitality, education, and health services, is still below pre-pandemic levels. The losses
for women are even larger when considering how fast these industries were growing
before the pandemic.
The shift to remote work may have been a mitigating factor for employment for
women without college degrees. Overall, workers without college degrees were hit
particularly hard by the pandemic recession because remote work was much more
common for those with a degree. 14 However, women without degrees were affected less
than men, probably because the jobs they held were more likely to be able to be
performed remotely than those of men without college degrees. 15
We have seen a substantial recovery in the labor market for both genders since the
worst of the pandemic. By the end of 2020, unemployment rates had equalized, and the
gap between gender participation rates had returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2021.
However, because that gap had been narrowing in the five years prior to the onset of
COVID, we can assume that the participation gap would have continued to decrease over
that time.

Around 62 percent of college education workers worked remotely in May 2020. See Claudia Goldin
(2022), “Understanding the Economic Impact of COVID-19 on Women.” Brookings Papers on Economic
Activity, Spring, https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/SP22_BPEA_Goldin_confdraft.pdf.
15
25 percent of non-college women worked remotely at that time, compared with 14 percent of non-college
men. Goldin (2022)
14

-8So, based on what we know about the history and recent experience of women in
the labor market, what does the future hold for working women?
On the demand side, the labor market continues to be strong and there are
abundant job opportunities for workers of all education and skill levels. With about four
million fewer people participating in the workforce today, there are still plenty of jobs
available even if we see the number of job openings reduced. We are also seeing a larger
number of women graduating from college than men, a development that is likely to help
insulate women from job losses in future recessions.
One complication is that the future of labor supply is uncertain, and it is difficult
to predict how labor force participation will evolve. Factors like generational aging were
already weighing on labor supply before the pandemic, and we saw millions of workers
accelerate retirement during the pandemic, effectively retiring early. Even the strong
labor market has not yet lured many of these early retirees back, and some believe that as
time passes it becomes less likely that they will return. Over time, those who chose to
leave the workforce early will move into a normal retirement age. We really don’t know
if gender will be a factor here as this is the first generation to retire that had large
numbers of women in the workforce, but workforce aging is an important consideration
when it comes to labor supply. We also don’t know how the influence of inflation will
affect decision making about returning to the workforce, but some may feel compelled to
return to work.
Another consideration is caregiving demands and how those responsibilities will
be shared within households. While I hope that we never see a public health emergency
like the one we’ve just been through, I hope that if we do, we can avoid the governmental

-9decisions to intentionally disrupt foundational education and the unnecessary forced
isolation of children. These policies have left a significant impact on this generation of
children, on families and their decision making about many things including participation
in the labor force.
One ongoing labor supply issue relates to the lingering effects of COVID that can
interfere with the ability to work or impose additional caregiving needs for family
members. By one account, nearly a fifth of adults who contracted COVID reported
ongoing symptoms of “long COVID,” affecting significantly more women than men. At
the same time, the number of working-age people with disabilities has increased
significantly. While the number of Americans reporting a disability had been rising
gradually over the past decade, the increase picked up in mid-2020, and about 2 million
more people reported they had a disability in July 2022 than at the outset of the
pandemic. 16
Disability has been a major drag on the work force in rural areas in the past.
Living in rural Kansas following the last recession, as I mentioned earlier, I am very
familiar with the challenges that disability presents for many aspects of the community—
beyond just economic conditions. Disability is also a significant challenge in Arkansas.
Women’s labor force attachment in Arkansas is below the national average. In the five
years before the pandemic, about 72 percent of prime-age women here were either
working or looking for work, compared with 75 percent nationally. This difference in

See U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2022), “Population—With a Disability, 16 Years and Over,”
retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, August 5,
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LNU00074597.
16

- 10 labor force participation is primarily explained by illness or disability and existed long
before the onset of COVID.
There is no magic wand that will draw workers back into the labor force,
especially when generous government benefits programs are provided for those who are
capable of working. But as challenging as these issues are to address, there are some
lessons to draw from experience and research regarding approaches that encourage
people to work. Research suggests that assistance programs including job search
assistance, training programs, and private-sector employment subsidies increase the
likelihood of employment by up to 10 percent for those who utilize the programs. 17 The
benefits of this assistance are not always immediately realized, but women were more
likely to benefit from job training and private-sector employment programs.
In conclusion, although we still have about 4 million people out of the prepandemic workforce, we continue to see strong employment gains and low
unemployment rates—the kind of labor market that historically has pulled in more
workers. As the service sector continues to recover and as schools and childcare
establishments open more fully, I see potential for greater employment opportunities for
women in the future. Obviously, economic conditions will influence job opportunities
going forward. Today’s high inflation and strong employment will likely create some
pressure on labor and employment.

See David Card, Jochen Kluve, and Andrea Weber (2018), “What Works? A Meta Analysis of Recent
Active Labor Market Program Evaluations,” Journal of the European Economic Association, vol. 16
(June), pp. 894–931, https://academic.oup.com/jeea/article/16/3/894/4430618.
17