Kiwis, Dads and Staying at Home

Posted on 21. Jul, 2009 by Brian Reid in General

Giving my longstanding frustrations with the Census Bureau’s inability to sensibly quantify the manner and extent of involved fatherhood in this country, it’s not surprising that looking abroad gives a more nuanced view of what’s going on.

If you’re looking for beach reading, you could do worse than print out this report out of New Zealand on “Men’s Participation in Unpaid Care.” In addition to giving the state of things in New Zealand, is a great review of the literature and where other countries come down in various areas. It also nicely summarizes the reasons why dads tend *not* to end as the primary caretakers.

But if you want to get right to the heart of it, there is a tally of the number of at-home dads (men not in labour force, looking after children). Those numbers have shot up from 6,100 in the mid-80s to more than 14,000 today. (The peak appears to have come earlier in this decade.) The “playground ratio” of at-home moms to at-home dads is about 10:1.

Though not huge numbers, that ain’t bad in a country of 4 million (and, again, underscores that the U.S. Census count misses a lot of at-home dads in this country).

3 Responses to “Kiwis, Dads and Staying at Home”

  1. Keith Wilcox

    22. Jul, 2009

    This is an interesting tally. It would be nice to see what information regarding stay at home dads brings the next US Census.

  2. Mom who thinks dads rock

    25. Jul, 2009

    The figure I have is that over 2 million preschoolers are cared for by stay at home Dads. How cool is that?

  3. Dad Blog

    09. Aug, 2009

    I would love to be one of those 2 million dads. I am lucky to stay home with my youngin in the summer though.

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