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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsEarn Less, Spend More: New Report Shows Women are Gouged by the Marketplace (Pink Tax)
(and yet one more reason to loathe the colour pink)
Earn Less, Spend More: New Report Shows Women are Gouged by the Marketplace
On average, women in the United States earn 79 cents to every mans dollar. Thats enough to get your blood boiling, but add to that the finding that women pay more for most products than menand your head will be spinning.
New research from the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs (DCA) finds that womens products cost an average of 7 percent more than similar products for men. Broken down by industry, women pay:
13 percent more for personal-care products
8 percent more for clothing
8 percent more for senior/home healthcare products
7 percent more for toys and accessories
4 percent more for girls clothing
According to the report, In all but five of the 35 product categories analyzed, products for female consumers were priced higher than those for male consumers. Across the sample, DCA found that womens products cost more 42 percent of the time while mens products cost more 18 percent of the time. Experts have long known that women pay a so-called Pink Tax on many products, from clothing to personal-care items. Ms. reported on the phenomenon in 2011, calling on legislators to correct the gender pricing gap, and Mic called out the tax this year in a widely shared video. Some studies have suggested that women may pay up to $1,400 a year in additional fees thanks to the Pink Tax.
This isnt just an American problem, either. Last year, a petition by activists in France garnered more than 45,000 signatures, leading that countrys government to begin investigating the Pink Tax. The countrys secretary of state for womens rights even asked on Twitter, Is pink a luxury color?
While some states and cities, such as California and New York, have laws on the books banning the practice of charging women more than men for similar services, the same isnt true for products. Thats why we say: Enough is enough! Share your gender price gap pictures on Twitter and Instagram with the DCAs hashtag #genderpricing and lets stop companies from gouging women.
http://msmagazine.com/blog/2015/12/23/earn-less-spend-more-new-report-shows-women-are-gouged-by-the-marketplace/
Sam_Fields
(305 posts)Greed.
niyad
(113,513 posts)dry clean a woman's blouse than a man's shirt is but one example.
Gormy Cuss
(30,884 posts)so long as there's a competitor who hasn't raised the price.
When states pass laws requiring gender-neutral pricing on services like dry cleaning and haircuts some people make the same claim as you: the prices for everyone will rise. Turns out that some services for men rose in price but most did not while prices for services for women dropped.
I remember living in a state when the change happened. Dry cleaners laundering men's white dress shirt charged four times as much to launder a shirt for a woman -- and some even charged that premium when it was a woman bringing in small sized men's shirts (waiters, usually.)
leftyladyfrommo
(18,869 posts)I buy my jeans in the women's dept. But I buy all my t-shirts and flannel shirts and outdoor stuff in the men'should dept. It's a lot warmer and it's cheaper.
niyad
(113,513 posts)meow2u3
(24,767 posts)I buy my jeans in the women's department because men's jeans and pants don't fit me right. The only pants I get in the men's department are sweatpants.
Men's sweats and tees are a hell of a lot cheaper than the same clothes marketed to women. For instance, I can get a sweatshirt for $9 in the men's, but have to pay $15 in the women's dept.