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Losing a Parent Can Cut a Worker's Earnings for Years, a New Study Finds



Grief and caregiving responsibilities don't stay at home — and without adequate support, they follow workers into the office.


Most workplaces operate on the quiet assumption that personal life stays personal. Some managers even make it explicit: leave your problems at the door. But grief has never respected office hours, and a new study on parental bereavement makes that painfully clear.

Economists at the University of Oxford set out to examine something that touches nearly every adult — the death of a parent — yet has received surprisingly little attention in labor market research. What they found is striking: losing a parent doesn't just wound workers emotionally in the short term. It depresses their earning power for years.

By comparing workers who had experienced a sudden, first parental death against those who hadn't, the researchers found that male earnings dropped by two percent over the following five years. Women fared slightly worse, with a three percent decline over the same period. One of the study's more counterintuitive findings: a mother's death tends to hit harder than a father's, for both sons and daughters.

The mental health toll is equally clear. In the aftermath of a parent's death, both men and women sought more mental health support, visited doctors more frequently, and were prescribed mental health medications and opioids at higher rates. These are not abstract statistics — they describe people who are struggling, and struggling workers are less productive ones.

The study also explored how parental death reshapes family dynamics. Grandparents often serve as an informal childcare safety net, and their loss removes it. Women with young children felt this most acutely, experiencing a four percent earnings drop over five years — larger than the decline seen among childless peers of either gender. Meanwhile, the death of one parent frequently shifts the burden of caring for the surviving one onto adult children, particularly when that parent's health is fragile. For many, this means not just emotional strain, but logistical upheaval — reduced hours, career pivots, or even relocating closer to home.

What elevates this beyond a study of personal hardship is its scale. Because parental bereavement is nearly universal, its economic ripple effects are too. Co-author Mathias Fjællegaard Jensen framed it plainly: the findings show that "the effects of bereavement can reach into other parts of life for years afterwards, including people's working lives, through mental health and family support." That's not just a message for grieving individuals — it's one for employers and policymakers.

Jensen also offered an important caveat: the data were collected in Denmark, a country with subsidized childcare, robust mental health infrastructure, and strong social safety nets. By global standards, Denmark's workers are well-cushioned against exactly these kinds of shocks. The study's findings, he suggested, should therefore be read as a conservative estimate. In countries like the United States — where healthcare is expensive, mental health care is often inaccessible, and government support is patchier — the earnings and well-being toll of losing a parent is likely considerably steeper.

For business leaders, the takeaway is practical. At some point, a member of your team will lose a parent. The data suggests the effects won't be confined to a week of bereavement leave — they may quietly persist for years, shaping that person's focus, energy, and output in ways neither they nor you may immediately recognize.

The response doesn't have to be complicated. Generous compassionate leave is a start. Grief counseling, flexible scheduling, or temporary adjustments for employees juggling childcare or eldercare responsibilities can go a long way. These aren't just acts of decency — they're investments. Companies that support workers through loss tend to retain them, earn their loyalty, and build the kind of reputation that attracts talent in the first place.

Grief is inevitable. How employers respond to it is not.

Based on research by the University of Oxford, as reported by Phys.org.

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