Fortune | FORTUNE 10月06日
职场母亲面临抉择:返岗要求收紧与育儿成本飙升的双重压力
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KPMG报告指出,2025年将是美国职场母亲的一个转折点。一方面,企业要求员工返岗的规定日益严格,另一方面,育儿成本持续攀升。这两大因素叠加,正迫使许多职业母亲离开职场。报告显示,2025年初至年中,有年幼子女的母亲劳动参与率下降近3个百分点,与此同时,财富500强企业要求全职返岗的比例翻倍。特别是受过大学教育、育有年幼子女的母亲,正因工作时间不灵活以及紧张的托育市场而面临巨大压力。托育行业因政府补贴结束而陷入劳动力短缺,导致价格上涨和选择减少,进一步加剧了母亲们的困境。

🏢 返岗要求收紧与育儿成本飙升的双重压力:KPMG报告指出,2025年,美国职场母亲正面临日益严格的返岗要求和不断上涨的育儿成本。这两大因素的叠加效应,正促使大量职业母亲选择离开职场。报告具体数据显示,2025年初至年中,有年幼子女的母亲劳动参与率下降了近3个百分点,而财富500强企业要求全职返岗的比例则翻了一番。这种“推拉机制”使得原本在疫情期间或之后依靠灵活工作安排得以维持职位的母亲们,在新的职场环境下举步维艰。

📉 托育危机加剧母亲离职潮:托育行业面临劳动力短缺和需求激增的双重困境,导致价格居高不下且可选项稀少。联邦稳定基金于2023年结束后,托育行业就业人数远低于预期,这直接推高了服务价格,并延长了等待名单,严重影响了父母的就业稳定性。尤其是受过大学教育、育有年幼子女的母亲,由于托育服务的不可靠性和高昂成本,正经历着自2023年高点以来最显著的劳动参与率下降。

⚖️ 性别差距扩大与经济影响:当工作安排无法适应额外的通勤时间和在办公室工作日时,母亲们往往是那个被要求削减工时或完全退出劳动力市场的一方,这不仅会侵蚀家庭收入,也导致企业失去经验丰富的人才。数据显示,2025年8月,拥有大学学历且育有年幼子女的母亲劳动参与率降至约77%,而同等条件的父亲则略有上升,这进一步加剧了父母群体中的性别工作参与差距。这种趋势对家庭的长期财富积累和性别工资差距都将产生深远影响。

For U.S. mothers, 2025 is emerging as a workplace inflection point where stricter return‑to‑office mandates and rising childcare costs together combined to spark an exodus of working mothers, according to a new KPMG report titled “The Great Exit.”

Labor force participation among mothers with children under five dropped nearly three percentage points between January and June 2025, coinciding with a near doubling of full‑time office mandates among Fortune 500 companies. This aligns with KPMG’s finding that mothers—especially college‑educated mothers of very young children—are being pushed out by inflexible schedules atop a constrained childcare market.

As KPMG puts it, simply: “Since late 2023, women with young children have been leaving the labor force.”

What the report says

    Childcare labor shortages have collided with elevated demand, keeping prices high and options scarce; as a result, mothers are exiting or reducing hours more than fathers, with the steepest declines among college‑educated mothers of very young children since 2023 highs.Childcare employment flatlined after federal stabilization funds ended in 2023, leaving the sector roughly 100,000 workers below where it would be had support continued, which contributes to higher prices and waitlists that destabilize work for parents.
      KPMG says the so-called “childcare cliff” has become “more of a plateau. But that plateau shows a sector in crisis.”
    Return‑to‑office policies amplify these pressures: when care arrangements can’t flex to added commute time or in‑office days, one parent—disproportionately the mother—cuts hours or leaves the labor force entirely, eroding household income and firms’ retention of experienced talent.

Key numbers

    Labor force participation for college‑educated mothers with very young children fell to about 77% in August 2025 from near 80% in 2023, while fathers in comparable groups edged up, widening gender gaps in work attachment among parents of young kids.Childcare prices have increased at roughly twice the pace of overall inflation, reflecting supply constraints and higher operating costs that providers pass on to families, which in turn raises exit pressure for mothers.
      “The childcare crisis is not new,” KPMG writes, “but it has increased in intensity. Once parents returned to work and sought more childcare services, prices started to surge again.”
    One striking conclusion: Women with a bachelors or higher and young children have represented the largest decline in labor force participation since 2023.

Why it matters

    Household impact: Reduced maternal labor force participation lowers earnings and career progression, with long‑run effects on wealth accumulation and gender wage gaps, while forcing difficult trade‑offs in family budgeting under rising care costs.Macro impact: Employers lose productive, experienced workers; hiring and training costs rise; and aggregate growth slows as labor supply retreats in segments critical to productivity and leadership pipelines.Policy risk: The report’s trends are unfolding alongside a weaker jobs market and policy shifts that disproportionately affect women-heavy sectors, which can compound the exit dynamics if childcare access and affordability do not improve.

Broader context

    Return‑to‑office mandates: Fortune reports that full‑time in‑office requirements among Fortune 500 firms rose to about 24% in 2Q25 from 13% at end‑2024, eroding the flexibility that had kept many mothers attached to work during and after the pandemic; as mandates tightened, participation for mothers of young kids fell from roughly 69.7% to 66.9% by mid‑2025, echoing KPMG’s documented declines among college‑educated mothers of very young children into 2025.The push‑pull mechanism: loss of flexibility collides with soaring childcare costs and limited availability, forcing mothers into hours cuts or exits.

What to watch for next

    Immigration and workforce supply: With about one in five childcare workers being immigrants nationally, tighter immigration policies could further constrain staffing, exacerbating shortages and price pressures in high‑cost states.Employer responses: Expanded flexibility, backup care, and on‑site options can reduce parental disruptions; absent such supports, stricter in‑office mandates tend to trigger disproportionate maternal exits or hours cuts.Policy experimentation: State actions (funding expansions, tax credits, wage supports) and federal choices on childcare, labor, and immigration will shape whether the current plateau shifts toward recovery or deepens into a prolonged capacity gap.

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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职场母亲 返岗要求 育儿成本 KPMG报告 劳动参与率 托育危机 性别差距 Working Mothers Return-to-Office Childcare Costs KPMG Report Labor Force Participation Childcare Crisis Gender Gap
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