WSJ What’s News - The State of Women in 2026: Progress, Pay Gaps and Participation
Episode Date: March 15, 2026It’s Women’s History Month, and we’re taking a look at how American women are doing—professionally and economically. Government data show that women’s overall labor force participation is al...most back to pre-pandemic levels. But as the labor market weakens, the reality—especially for mothers of young children—is more complicated. Host Alex Ossola speaks with WSJ economics reporter Harriet Torry and Matthew Nestler, senior economist at KPMG, about the trends driving the data and what it really means for women today. Further Reading: Coronavirus Employment Shock Hits Women Harder Than Men Women’s Return to the Workforce Piles Momentum on a Hot Economy Millions of Women Left Work During the Pandemic. Where Are They Now? In America’s Return to the Office, Women Are Falling Behind Women’s Pay Is Falling Behind. Is the Return to the Office to Blame? DEI Rules That Changed Corporate Boards Are Vanishing Black Americans Are Losing Jobs in a Warning for the Economy Labor Force Participation Rate - Women Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, what's news listeners. It's Sunday, March 15th. I'm Alex O'Sala for the Wall Street Journal.
This is What's News Sunday, the show where we tackle the big questions about the biggest stories in the news by reaching out to our colleagues across the newsroom to help explain what's happening in our world.
On today's show, it may be Women's History Month, but today we're not just looking back.
How are American women from the C-suite to child care actually doing professionally and economically in 2026?
There's little doubt that women have made great strides in the past few decades.
Women are holding more managerial roles or top jobs at companies than in the past.
They're also more likely to have a college degree.
That's been the case for a few years now.
According to McKinsey, women now control about a third of all retail financial assets in the U.S.,
and that's expected to rise to between 40 and 45 percent by 2030.
But underneath all these data points, the reality for many individual women is a bit more complicated.
The pay gap between men and women keeps getting wider, particularly so for black and Hispanic women.
Parents of young children are seeing the cost of child care skyrocket.
A 2025 survey by care.com found that families in the U.S. spent an average of 22% of their household income on child care alone.
A rollback of DEI policies means S&P 500 companies are appointing fewer women and people of color.
To get a sense of what's driving these trends and how women are actually doing as a whole,
I spoke with WSJ economics reporter Harriet Torrey and Matthew Nestler, senior economist at professional services firm, KPMG.
Let's go back for a second to the COVID-19 pandemic.
I remember all these headlines at the time that women were leaving their jobs.
Harriet, why did the pandemic hit women particularly hard?
I think caregiving is really the answer to that question.
During the pandemic, we saw everything shut down.
Schools went to remote learning.
And it was just a really tough time for so many families to juggle both of them.
And just by default, a lot of women just didn't have the time or the bandwidth to try and stay in the labor force.
A lot of women left the labor force.
And it took time for them to come back.
I mean, there are definitely some benefits from the pandemic.
We saw this very big adjustment to remote working.
It became so much more normalized to have a remote job.
And there are many women out there who have profited from that and who have found a better work-life balance from being able to work from home
and to have that flexibility over their schedules.
But certainly initially in the pandemic, when the economy shut down,
it was really tough for families to balance caregiving duties and work.
Matthew, women is a big group, of course.
Have we seen the employment in certain groups affected more than others?
So post-COVID, there has been a bit of a whiplash
where there was that decline and then there was a sharp increase.
And when my research is focused on is that over the past couple of years,
some of that has started to decline again. And we saw both the higher highs and lower lows in particular
among those with a college education who benefited disproportionately from the expansion of remote work,
flexible work arrangements. And that is one of the main reasons now over the past couple of years
there's been a sharper decline, is as that has started to be pulled back a little bit.
You both beat me too talking about where we are right now. The most
Most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the labor force participation rate for women in January of this year was 57.5%.
That's down just a bit from the 58% before the pandemic in February 2020.
You talked about hybrid schedules, the change to the return to office that's now having an impact.
How about some of the industries in particular that are maybe driving this?
Economists often talk about the difference between the overall participation rate, which to some degree is based on the aging population,
we would expect that to decline somewhat.
If you look at women in prime working age, so 25 to 54, January actually hit an all-time high in
participation.
But those aggregate figures can mask a lot of differences underneath the hood, and that's where we've
seen some of those declines.
We've seen them pop up in a lot of different industries.
They're in health care, education, but in other industries, there have been some gains in
information and manufacturing as well. Industries you might not necessarily think to the same
degree for this specific group of prime age women with young children. I know you recently came out
with a report about these mothers of young children, how they've started returning to the workforce.
What were some of the most interesting findings from that report?
One of the interesting findings was that over the past couple of years, that particular
group, moms with young children under five, there's been a decline in employment,
but also of participation.
And that is different from the past two cycles during COVID and during the financial crisis,
where employment fell for this group, but participation did not because unemployment rose.
So a quick side definition, if over the past four weeks you have looked for a job,
you are classified as unemployed and thus in the labor market.
And so that has been one of the striking differences,
how this has happened, A, outside of a formal recession,
but that B, we've seen this decline in participation.
Now, coming back forward all the way to today,
over the past six months,
we've seen a little bit of increase in participation,
but a lot of that has been driven by active job search
or an increase in unemployment.
We're seeing people move a little bit between employment,
maybe to out of the labor force,
then they're looking for a job.
Maybe they get a job.
What we don't know is moving forward,
given some of the structural constraints for the,
this group, the degree to which they will be able to have employment and keep it, or whether
we'll continue to see the shuffling in and out from employment out of the labor force,
into active job search, and et cetera.
Harriet, hopping over to you for a second.
What are some of the factors that are still keeping women out of the workforce?
Overall, the labor market is just not that great for everybody, men and women.
It's just quite a difficult time if you're looking for a job.
What we saw when we came out of the pandemic was that there were very acute worker shortages.
So for a couple of years, the labour market was extremely hot.
Wage growth was through the roof.
If you wanted a job, it was really easy to find one, and you could probably get a nice, hefty wage increase to go with it.
But we have seen a sharp cooling since then.
The labour market has come down from this high, and now people are reporting it's much harder to find a job.
We've seen people perhaps spending longer trying to find a job, and it is just harder if you're on the sideline.
to break back in.
We are hearing this a lot.
Coming up, how women are doing matters for more than just women.
It could show how the economy is doing overall.
That's after the break.
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Harriet, you mentioned pay, and that's, of course, something that comes up a lot in conversations around gender equality.
You wrote a few months ago about how last year women working full-time made 81 cents on the dollar compared to men, which is the widest pay gap since 2016.
What's driving that expansion?
There are various theories for what might be going on.
We did see in 2024 and also 2023 this widening in the gender pay gap.
And of course, that was as the labor market started to cool.
2022 was really the very, very hot year.
And then we saw a site easing on that front.
And what we think might be a factor is that companies started cool.
calling people back to the office. And as we said before, workers did win a lot of remote work
flexibility during the pandemic. And many people, especially those of parents with young children
or people who have other caregiving responsibilities, do find that not having to commute,
just add an enormous amount of very valuable time to your schedule. But as people were being
called back into the office, many women that I spoke to for the story went through this and just
said, I can't do this. It's too hard with my kids or with my caregiving responsibilities. Even
People without kids just say it's too much and it's not worth it. So they were quitting and taking a different job. And often that came with a pay cut. But many workers decided it was worth it to be able to preserve that flexibility in their lives.
I want to talk a little bit about the stakes. How much of an impact really does women's employment, women's pay, have on the overall economy, on the overall labor market?
This is all happening within the context of two major trends. One, the aging population that is increasingly retiring and, two, the should, the should, the should, the share.
shift to a more restrictive immigration policy, both of which is putting downward pressure on the
number of workers of labor supply. And so within that context moving forward, every employer is likely
to face some challenges attracting and retaining workers. So this is a major issue not only today,
but moving forward in terms of employers being able to attract and retain that top talent.
And I would also add, in addition to the child care side, there's also the other side of
the care life cycle, which is elder care. And a lot of women in particular, especially Gen X and
older, are providing unpaid elder care, which is another constraint on the ability to choose to work
and how they work. And so I do view these as central workforce, business, and economic issues today
and moving forward. If I were to meet you at a kid's birthday party, let's say, and I were to ask you,
what is the state of the American woman, like the economic state? What would you say? It's a story of
divergence. The high level, the aggregate participation rate among prime age women employment shares
are at or near all-time highs. That is a success story to a certain degree. But that does mask a lot
of differences among specific groups. And so if everyone is not doing well, that means that we still
have a lot of work to do. And that's where this specific group is really struggling right now.
Yeah, I would agree with that. American women are more educated than ever before. So in many ways,
women are in a very, very strong position to succeed in their careers, but there are certain structural
issues that are just difficult and hard to overcome and that women tend to just bear the burden
of more profoundly things like childcare and elder care. So I think a lot of people are struggling
to make it work. We have seen extremely high inflation over the past few years, which has really
made it hard for families to pay for things like care services that they might need. It's not easy,
and this is also an economy that doesn't have the levels of state support that perhaps other developed
economies do. Many countries in Europe subsidize childcare to a high degree because they see it as
important economic infrastructure. Certain states do more than others in the US, but it's definitely
not the case that you have nationwide childcare infrastructure or anything like that.
There are a lot of ways in which American women are poised to be extremely successful and achieve a great
deal in the economy, but there are also some structural difficulties that make it hard to balance
that with family life.
Matthew Nestler, Harriet Tori,
thank you both so much for joining me.
Thank you.
Thanks so much.
And that's it for What's News Sunday for March 15th.
Today's show was produced by Pierre Bienname
with supervising producer Melanie Roy.
I'm Alex Ocelah,
and we'll be back tomorrow morning with a brand new show.
Until then, thanks for listening.
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