The most important finding from a new study on paternity leave is probably also the least surprising: New dads tend to take off the exact amount of time they’ll get paid to take.
On the Monday before Father’s Day, Boston College’s Center for Work and Family released its annual study on working dads. This year, it focused on paternity leave: how much leave fathers take, how important the benefit is to new dads and how much paid time off they receive after the birth of a child.
The study, said Brad Harrington, the center’s executive director and a professor at Boston College’s Carroll School of Management, found a strong correlation between how much paid paternity leave men receive as an employee benefit and the length of time off they took.
For instance, among respondents who received two weeks of paid leave, the largest share of those fathers (64 percent) took off two weeks. The same went for those who got one week of paid leave (34 percent, the largest group, took one week), as well as those who got four weeks of paid leave (41 percent, again the largest share, took off the full four weeks).