Tag: economic stability

When Fathers Lose Access to Economic Opportunity, Families Carry the Cost

Since household composition is often shaped by economics, fathers cannot be left out of the conversation about why female-headed households carry so much. When fathers lose access to stable work and transportation, mothers often absorb the cost. 

Millions of households may be headed by women, but that does not mean conditions affecting fathers are irrelevant. In many cases, they are central.

This is where the public conversation needs to mature.

Black Work, and the Myth of a Gender Divide: What the Employment Numbers Really Say About Family Stability

In February 2026, unemployment for Black men ages 20 and older was 7%, and for Black women ages 20 and older it was 7.1%, nearly identical. This alone should interrupt a lot of lazy commentary that claims one group is faring better than the other and causing the labor market gaps the other faces. 

The real lesson is that both Black men and Black women remain more exposed than the average U.S. worker.

When a Baby Has No Stable Place to Sleep, Fatherhood Has a Housing Problem

For too long, the public response to vulnerable families has imagined family stabilization without fully imagining the father. We build family services systems exclusively around mothers and babies, and then wonder why fathers remain peripheral. 

It’s time to ask about dad, make room for dad, serve dad, and equip dad. It’s time for public policy to reflect the fact that when a father is stabilized, the child is often better stabilized, too.

father in the grocery store with his daughters

America’s Most Expensive Blind Spot: The $154 Billion Cost of Ignoring Fathers

This report lands because it restores dignity to the fatherhood conversation and refuses to reduce fathers to heroes or hazards. It frames fathers as economic actors, relational anchors, and public health factors. It suggests that improving father involvement is not just about a man “doing right.” It’s about building conditions where doing right is possible, repeatable, and supported.

If America is willing to spend $154.2 billion cleaning up the consequences of instability, America should be willing to spend far less building stability. This frees the fatherhood conversation from ideology and moves it toward stewardship.

How the 2024 Squatters Act Continues to Impact Fathers and Families in Georgia

Housing remains at the top of Georgia’s challenges, especially in Atlanta, where rents rise faster than wages and where fathers with limited income face shrinking options. The Squatters Act didn’t create this reality, but it did create new urgency.

Top 5 Emerging Fatherhood Topics: Charting a New Course for Fathers Everywhere

In this blog, we explore five emerging fatherhood topics we’re watching now — Child Support, Maternal Health Care Advocacy, Housing, Economic Sustainability, and Dads as Doulas — and discuss why these issues are vital, what actions are needed, and how FI is driving change in each area.