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Dianne Williams Wildt, MBA
Certified Retirement Counselor®
Since 1983 in the financial services and investment industry
Retirement Pathways, Inc.
4500 Bowling Blvd., Suite 100
Louisville, KY 40207
Phone: 502-797-1258
Email: dianne@retirementpathways.com
Website: www.retirementpathways.com
Women continue to comprise a bigger part of the workforce, usually while maintaining traditional roles at home. Both roles prove women create significant economic input. Because of their economic contributions at home and away, women may need life insurance.A Snapshot
Women are involved in every facet of the workforce. According to the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)*, there are 74.6 million women in the civilian labor force. Women are 47% of the workforce, and they own close to 10 million businesses. These enterprises account for $1.4 trillion in receipts.
More often than not, women combine career with motherhood. The same BLS report shows seven in 10 mothers with children younger than age 18 are in the workforce – three-quarters of them full-time. Today, mothers are the primary or sole earners for 40% of households with children under 18 today, compared to just 11% in 1960.
While it is relatively easy to gauge how much life insurance a person in the workforce needs, the economic value of a stay-at-home mom is a little more difficult to discern.
You might start with the cost of day care and after-school care needed for young children. Women also may don the hats of personal shopper, chauffeur, housekeeper, chef and more. If you were to pay for these services with overtime pay making up a significant part of your equation, it is easy to see how a stay-at-home mom is worth at least six figures a year.
It’s clear women are a growing economic force, and that they need life insurance as much as the guy in the next cubicle — or corner office. Talk to a licensed financial professional to learn more.
* Bureau of Labor Statistics Blog “12 Stats About Working Women” by Mark De Wolf, March 1, 2017
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Investment advisory services offered through American Capital Management, Inc., a State Registered Investment Advisor. Retirement Pathways, Inc. is independent of American Capital Management, Inc.
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