A new Pew Research Center study shows married women are beginning to earn more money than their husbands. According to the study, Black wives, in particular, are significantly more likely to be the ...
I had the privilege of hosting a panel featuring myself, Kimberly Foss from Mercer and Lisa Brown from Corient. We delved into the profound transformation of female breadwinners over time, influenced ...
Good morning! Columbia gives in to Trump's demands to recover federal funding, women's college basketball could still be undervalued, and Fortune reporter Beth Greenfield examines what happens when ...
Women are most likely to outearn their male partners in northern cities that sit in blue states, a new analysis finds. Nearly 30% of households with opposite-sex partners in New Haven, Connecticut, ...
Estimates suggest that between $84 and $124 trillion in assets will be transferred from Baby Boomers (defined as those born from 1946-1964) on down by 2048, according to Cerulli Associates. And as the ...
In late May, the Pew Research Center released a report showing that more than 40 percent of U.S. households with children under age 18 list women as the sole or primary provider. Wives out-earn their ...
Wives are catching up to husbands as the primary breadwinners in marriages but men still have the edge in most households, the Pew Research Center reported Thursday. The share of marriages in which ...
The movement of women out of the home and into the paid labor force has changed the way families live and work today. The role of working mothers as breadwinners has received increased media and ...
For centuries, it was a truth universally acknowledged that a capable man must be in want of a weaker, more pliant wife. In China, the ideal spousal relationship has typically been described in terms ...