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niyad

(113,306 posts)
Wed Apr 11, 2018, 01:44 PM Apr 2018

The Senselessness of Women Earning Less (Equal Pay Day 10 april)

The Senselessness of Women Earning Less




It’s something my mother told me, time and time again, for as far back as I can remember. “Don’t do anything to make the men in your life look bad,” she would say in a scolding manner, while shaking her finger at me. I believe the first time I heard it I was in third grade. Rather than being proud of my high score on a national reading exam, I was scolded for performing much higher than my similary-aged brother. But this warning did not limit itself to my scholastic achievements, nor to my brother. It included my athletic prowess once I became a teenager, and then again, when I joined the full-time labor force after graduating from college. This struck me as particularly senseless, since I grew up in public housing, where every penny my parents earned counted, and was counted, even though my mother worked a similar job but still made less money than my father. I, too, was told not to earn any more money than my father ever did.

. . . . . .

Since today, April 10th, is Equal Pay Day, there is no better time to consider this. Women in the U.S. who work full time, year-round are paid only 80 cents for every dollar paid to men — and for women of color, the wage gap is even larger. This is despite research that has shown, time and time again, that women’s earnings are increasingly important to the economic stability of families. In the US, for example, half of all households with children under 18 have a breadwinner mother, who is either a single mother who heads a household, or a married mother who provides at least 40 percent of the couple’s joint earnings.

The benefits to providing equal pay are even more convincing:

Providing equal pay to women would have a dramatic impact on families, since the poverty rate would be cut in half, falling from 8.0 percent to 3.8 percent.
Approximately 25.8 million children would benefit from the increased earnings of their mothers if they received equal pay.
The number of children with working mothers living in poverty would be nearly cut in half, dropping from 5.6 million to 3.1 million.

Unfortunately, however, the mission (and definition) of patriarchy is to maintain a social system where males hold primary power and predominate in roles of political leadership, moral authority, social privilege and control of property (finances). So, for those who wish to maintain that power, these benefits may not be of interest at all. Perhaps, then, the additional facts below will prove more compelling to the unrelenting:
The United States economy would have produced additional income of $512.6 billion if women received equal pay; this represents 2.8 percent of 2016 gross domestic product (GDP). The total increase in women’s earnings with pay equity represents approximately 16 times what the federal and state governments spent in fiscal year 2015 on Temporary Assistance to Needy Families. Further, according to a study in part conducted by WomenCertified, a women’s consumer advocacy and retail training organization, women spend $4 trillion annually, accounting for 83% of all US Consumer spending. Paying women equally would only serve to enhance their contribution to the nation’s gross national product.

. . . .




https://womensenews.org/2018/04/the-senselessness-of-women-earning-less/

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The Senselessness of Women Earning Less (Equal Pay Day 10 april) (Original Post) niyad Apr 2018 OP
. . . niyad Apr 2018 #1
Kick - haele Apr 2018 #2
do you think the attitude in the military has changed much since you were in? niyad Apr 2018 #5
In some places it has. haele Apr 2018 #8
K&R n/t Greybnk48 Apr 2018 #3
K&R smirkymonkey Apr 2018 #4
same here. second decade of the 21st century--and all that. niyad Apr 2018 #6
Kick and rec Equal Pay NOW!!!!! backtoblue Apr 2018 #7

haele

(12,654 posts)
2. Kick -
Thu Apr 12, 2018, 12:11 PM
Apr 2018

In my time active duty and reserves in the military, while I had equal pay due to my rank and time in rate, it once or twice took the misspelling of my first name back in the days prior to the "M" and "F" checkbox on every single form for me to be able to get the programs or billets that allowed me to continue to make the equal pay for the work.

I also had to appear to "work harder" or "act more confident" to maintain the same level of evaluations as the men did, because back in the 1970's and 1980's, women weren't supposed to be able to mentally or emotionally handle the technical and engineering expertise required for my billets - unless they were unfeminine nerds or lesbians.
If a woman could be considered "pretty", she was also considered emotionally less stable and more needy for someone to help her than a man would be, no matter how handsome or unattractive he was.

Haele

haele

(12,654 posts)
8. In some places it has.
Thu Apr 12, 2018, 12:38 PM
Apr 2018

In others, it hasn't. This is on both bases and in the various programs. It all depends on the attitude of the leadership in charge and how that attitude affects the rest of the command.
I've seen the significant difference a new CO or senior NCO can make on a command or a project office.

Haele

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