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A survey of 348 male managers at twenty Fortune 500 companies found that fathers from dual-career families put in an average of two fewer hours per week _ or about 4 percent less _ than men whose wives were at home. That was the only difference between the two groups of men. But the fathers with working wives, who presumably had a few more domestic responsibilities, earned almost 20 percent less.
Ann Crittenden The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World is Still the Least Valued
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A survey of 348 male managers at twenty Fortune 500 companies found that fathers from dual-career families put in an average of two fewer hours per week _ or about 4 percent less _ than men whose wives were at home. That was the only difference between the two groups of men. But the fathers with working wives, who presumably had a few more domestic responsibilities, earned almost 20 percent less.
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Ann Crittenden

The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World is Still the Least Valued

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