The invisible, unpaid work that women are often expected to shoulder — like raising children and managing households — is an “urgent matter” of gender justice, according to a new report on modern fatherhood.

The report, The State of the World’s Fathers, which examines data from over two dozen countries and information from nearly 12,000 people, was released this week by Promundo, a global advocacy group focused on gender-equality issues, and MenCare, a campaign focused on men’s family involvement.

Its major finding: that women still spend way more time than men, up to 10 times as much, on unpaid tasks like child care and senior care, as well as on volunteer work and domestic chores.

In order to tip the scales toward parity in the homes of heterosexual couples, the report says that men would need to spend at least 50 more minutes a day caring for children and households — and women, 50 minutes less.

That shouldn’t come as a huge surprise: The data supports widely cited findings from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development that found in 2018 that women in the United States spend about 1.6 times as much time as men do on such work. And the Bureau of Labor Statistics has reported that mothers shoulder 65 percent of child-care work.