Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Nardi wrote:
The generalities are from men/women in the workplace. We already know where the discrepancies come on the wage gap.
You said it shows that women don't put the hours in that men do, but now you seem to be talking about women in general having a higher amount of part time jobs rather than doing a direct comparison of a full time male and female worker.
Take a 40 year old male and a 40 year old female, who worked a full time job as an accountant since they graduated college. Would you expect them both to be equally good at their job? For the sake of argument, give the woman 16 total weeks of maternity leave over those 18 years since I know that will always come up that having a kid and missing 2 months of work somehow puts them permanently behind.
Generally, the men will still work longer hours because women prioritize life. Again, that isn't a harsh judgement, it's good judgement by women, IMO.
"Economist John Phelan describes the MBTA as a “union shop with uniform hourly wages where men and women adhere to the same rules and receive the same benefits. Workers are promoted on the basis of seniority rather than performance, and male and female workers of the same seniority have the same choices for scheduling, routes, vacation, and overtime. There is almost no scope here for a sexist boss to favor men over women.”
And yet, Bolotnyy and Emanuel reported that “female workers earn $0.89 on the male-worker dollar (weekly earnings).” The Ph.D. candidates used “confidential administrative data” on the authority’s bus and train operators “to show that the weekly earnings gap can be explained by the workplace choices that women and men make.”
From the abstract:
Women value time away from work and flexibility more than men, taking more unpaid time off using the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and working fewer overtime hours than men. When overtime hours are scheduled three months in advance, men and women work a similar number of hours; but when those hours are offered at the last minute, men work nearly twice as many. When selecting work schedules, women try to avoid weekend, holiday, and split shifts more than men.
To avoid unfavorable work times, women prioritize their schedules over route safety and select routes with a higher probability of accidents. Women are less likely than men to game the scheduling system by trading off work hours at regular wages for overtime hours at premium wages.
In his Fee.com article on the subject, Phelan explains where the often cited 80 cents for every dollar figure is derived: “by taking the total annual earnings of men in the American economy in a given year and dividing that by the number of male workers. This gives you the average annual earnings of an American man. Then you do the same thing but for women. The average annual women’s earnings come in at about 80 percent of the average annual man’s earnings. Presto, you have a gender wage gap.”
You can judge me harshly in the conclusion that men are better accountants because of the time and extra experience, that's fine. All I'm doing is connecting dots on that conclusion.