A striking thing about the jobs most commonly chosen by newly minted graduates of elite law schools, is that they come with valuable fringe benefits. Base salaries are widely imitated and therefore fairly uniform, but firms compete a bit more when it comes to benefits. Health plans, inclusion of same-sex partners, fitness centers, part-time work options, and other things are on the minds of employers and employees, but one particularly expensive and nonuniform benefit is parental leave. At Thanksgiving dinner this year I sat next to a new associate at a Boston firm who seemed thrilled that her firm offered maternity and paternity leave, for biological or adopted children, of three paid (plus benefits) months. The law requires only some leave without pay, so we can think of this as a benefit worth more than $50,000 per child. I think my friend's reaction was partly social/political, as she prefers a world in which parenting is encouraged, or at least not penalized, in this manner, and I think it is also economically rational. She does not think of this costly benefit as coming out of her paycheck, although I think it unlikely that she cashes in on this benefit with this employer, because she correctly sees her own compensation as moving in step with other firms' base salaries. I think her reaction would be the same even if the associate in the office next door had five children in the next five years, and even if that associate's partner also received paid leave from his or her employer. Of course, the birthrate in this group is likely to be low. The benefits come out of the partners' returns, though they may of course encourage new associates to join this firm.
Recent Comments