Posted on 08/04/2011 2:22:21 PM PDT by neverdem
Early this past spring, the White House Council on Women and Girls released a much-anticipated report called Women in America. One of its conclusions struck a familiar note: today, as President Obama said in describing the document, women still earn on average only about 75 cents for every dollar a man earns. Thats a huge discrepancy.
It is a huge discrepancy. Its also an exquisite example of what journalist Charles Seife has dubbed proofiness. Proofiness is the use of misleading statistics to confirm what you already believe. Indeed, the 75-cent meme depends on a panoply of apple-to-orange comparisons that support a variety of feminist policy initiatives, from the Paycheck Fairness Act to universal child care, while telling us next to nothing about the well-being of women.
This isnt to say that all is gender-equal in the labor market. It is not. It also isnt to imply that discrimination against women doesnt exist or that employers shouldnt get more creative in adapting to the large number of mothers in the workplace. It does and they should. But by severely overstating and sensationalizing what is a universal predicament (Im looking at you, Sweden and Iceland!), proofers encourage resentment-fueled demands that no government anywhere has ever fulfilledand that no government ever will.
Lets begin by unpacking that 75-cent statistic, which actually varies from 75 to about 81, depending on the year and the study. The figure is based on the average earnings of full-time, year-round (FTYR) workers, usually defined as those who work 35 hours a week or more.
But consider the mischief contained in that or more. It makes the full-time category embrace everyone from a clerk who arrives at her desk at 9 am and leaves promptly at 4 pm to a trial lawyer who eats dinner four nights a weekand lunch on weekendsat his desk. I assume, in this case, that the clerk is a woman and the lawyer a man for the simple reason thatand here is an average that proofers rarely mentionfull-time men work more hours than full-time women do. In 2007, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 27 percent of male full-time workers had workweeks of 41 or more hours, compared with 15 percent of female full-time workers; meanwhile, just 4 percent of full-time men worked 35 to 39 hours a week, while 12 percent of women did. Since FTYR men work more than FTYR women do, it shouldnt be surprising that the men, on average, earn more.
The way proofers finesse full-time can be a wonder to behold. Take a recent article in the Washington Post by Mariko Chang, author of a forthcoming book on the wealth gap between women and men. Chang cites a wage difference between full-time male and female pharmacists to show how even when they work in the same occupation, men earn more. A moments Googling led me to a 2001 study in the Journal of the American Pharmacists Association concluding that male pharmacists worked 44.1 hours a week, on average, while females worked 37.2 hours. That study is a bit dated, but its a good guess that things havent changed much in the last decade. According to a 2009 article in the American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, female pharmacists preference for reduced work hours is enough to lead to an industry labor shortage.
The other arena of mischief contained in the 75-cent statistic lies in the seemingly harmless term occupation. Everyone knows that a CEO makes more than a secretary and that a computer scientist makes more than a nurse. And most people wouldnt be shocked to hear that secretaries and nurses are likely to be women, while CEOs and computer scientists are likely to be men. That obviously explains much of the wage gap.
But proofers often make the claim that women earn less than men doing the exact same job. They cant possibly know that. The Labor Departments occupational categories can be so large that a woman could drive a truck through them. Among physicians and surgeons, for example, women make only 64.2 percent of what men make. Outrageous, right? Not if you consider that there are dozens of specialties in medicine: some, like cardiac surgery, require years of extra training, grueling hours, and life-and-death procedures; others, like pediatrics, are less demanding and consequently less highly rewarded. Only 16 percent of surgeons, but a full 50 percent of pediatricians, are women. So the statement that female doctors make only 64.2 percent of what men make is really on the order of a tautology, much like saying that a surgeon working 50 hours a week makes significantly more than a pediatrician working 37.
A good example of how proofers get away with using the rogue term occupation is Behind the Pay Gap, a widely quoted 2007 study from the American Association of University Women whose executive summary informs us in its second paragraph that one year out of college, women working full time earn only 80 percent as much as their male colleagues earn. The report divides the labor force into 11 extremely broad occupations determined by the Department of Education. So ten years after graduation, we learn, women who go into business earn considerably less than their male counterparts do. But the businessman could be an associate at Morgan Stanley who majored in econ, while the businesswoman could be a human-relations manager at Foot Locker who took a lot of psych courses. You dont read until the end of the summarya point at which many readers will have already Tweeted their indignationthat when you control for such factors as education and hours worked, theres actually just a 5 percent pay gap. But the AAUW isnt going to begin a report with the statement that women earn 95 percent of what their male counterparts earn, is it?
Now, while a 5 percent gap will never lead to a million-woman march on Washington, its not peanuts. Over a year, it can add up to real money, and over decades in the labor force, it can mean the difference between retirement in a Boca Raton co-op and a studio apartment in the inner suburbs. Many studies have examined the subject, and a consensus has emerged that when you control for what researchers call observable differencesnot just hours worked and occupation, but also marital and parental status, experience, college major, and industrythere is still a small unexplained wage gap between men and women. Two Cornell economists, Francine Blau and Lawrence Kahn, place the number at about 9 cents per dollar. In 2009, the CONSAD Research Corporation, under the auspices of the Labor Department, located the gap a little lower, at 4.8 to 7.1 percent.
So what do we make of what, for simplicitys sake, well call the 7 percent gap? You cant rule out discrimination, whether deliberate or unconscious. Many women say that male bosses are more comfortable dealing with male workers, especially when the job involves late-night meetings and business conferences in Hawaii. This should become a smaller problem over time, as younger men used to coed dorms and female roommates become managers and, of course, as women themselves move into higher management positions. Its also possible that male managers fear that a female candidate for promotion, however capable, will be more distracted by family matters than a male would be. They might assume that women are less able to handle competition and pressure. Its even possible that female managers think such things, too.
No, you cant rule out discrimination. Neither can you rule out other, equally plausible explanations for the 7 percent gap. The data available to researchers may not be precise; for instance, its extremely difficult to find accurate measures of work experience. Theres also a popular theory that women are less aggressive than men when it comes to negotiating salaries.
The point is that we dont know the reasonor, more likely, reasonsfor the 7 percent gap. What we do know is that making discrimination the default explanation for a wage gap, as proofers want us to do, leads us down some weird rabbit holes. Asian men and women earn more than white men and women do, says the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Does that mean that whites are discriminated against in favor of Asians? Female cafeteria attendants earn more than male ones do. Are men discriminated against in that field? Women who work in construction earn almost exactly what men in the field do, while women in education earn considerably less. The logic of default discrimination would lead us to conclude that construction workers are more open to having female colleagues than educators are. With all due respect to the construction workers, that seems unlikely.
So why do women work fewer hours, choose less demanding jobs, and then earn less than men do? The answer is obvious: kids. A number of researchers have found that if you consider only childless women, the wage gap disappears. June ONeill, an economist who has probably studied wage gaps as much as anyone alive, has found that single, childless women make about 8 percent more than single, childless men do (though the advantage vanishes when you factor in education). Using Census Bureau data of pay levels in 147 of the nations 150 largest cities, the research firm Reach Advisors recently showed that single, childless working women under 30 earned 8 percent more than their male counterparts did.
Thats likely to change as soon as the children arrive. Mothers, particularly those with young children, take more time off from work; even when they are working, theyre on the job less. Behind the Pay Gap found that among women who graduated from college in 199293, more than one-fifth (23 percent) of mothers were out of the work force in 2003, and another 17 percent were working part time, compared with under 2 percent of fathers in each case. Other studies show consistently that the first child significantly reduces a womans earnings and that the second child cuts them even further.
The most compelling research into the impact of children on womens careers and earningsone that also casts light on why women are a rarity at the highest levels of the corporate and financial worldcomes from a 2010 article in the American Economic Journal by Marianne Bertrand of the University of Chicago and Claudia Goldin and Lawrence Katz of Harvard. The authors selected nearly 2,500 MBAs who graduated between 1990 and 2006 from the University of Chicagos Booth School of Business and followed them as they made their way through the early stages of their careers. If there were discrimination to be found here, Goldin would be your woman. She is coauthor of a renowned 2000 study showing that blind auditions significantly increased the likelihood that an orchestra would hire female musicians.
Heres what the authors found: right after graduation, men and women had nearly identical earnings and working hours. Over the next ten years, however, women fell way behind. Survey questions revealed three reasons for this. First and least important, men had taken more finance courses and received better grades in those courses, while women had taken more marketing classes. Second, women had more career interruptions. Third and most important, mothers worked fewer hours. The careers of MBA mothers slow down substantially within a few years of first birth, the authors wrote. Though 90 percent of women were employed full-time and year-round immediately following graduation, that was the case with only 80 percent five years out, 70 percent nine years out, and 62 percent ten or more years outand only about half of women with children were working full-time ten years after graduation. By contrast, almost all the male grads were working full-time and year-round. Furthermore, MBA mothers, especially those with higher-earning spouses, actively chose family-friendly workplaces that would allow them to avoid long hours, even if it meant lowering their chances to climb the greasy pole.
In other words, these female MBAs bought tickets for what is commonly called the mommy track. A little over 20 years ago, the Harvard Business Review published an article by Felice Schwartz proposing that businesses make room for the many, though not all, women who would want to trade some ambition and earnings for more flexibility and time with their children. Dismissed as the mommy track, the idea was reviled by those who worried that it gave employers permission to discriminate and that it encouraged women to downsize their aspirations.
But as Virginia Postrel noted in a recent Wall Street Journal article, Schwartz had it right. When working mothers can, they tend to spend less time at work. That explains all those female pharmacists looking for reduced hours. It explains why female lawyers are twice as likely as men to go into public-interest law, in which hours are less brutal than in the partner track at Sullivan & Cromwell. Female medical students tell researchers that theyre choosing not to become surgeons because of lifestyle issues, which seems to be a euphemism for wanting more time with the kids. Thirty-three percent of female pediatricians are part-timersand thats not because they want more time to play golf.
In the literature on the pay gap and in the media more generally, this state of affairs typically leads to cries of injustice. The presumption is that women pursue reduced or flexible hours because men refuse to take equal responsibility for the children and because the United States does not have family-friendly policies. Child care is frequently described as a burden to women, a patriarchal imposition on their ambitions, and a source of profound inequity. But is this attitude accurate? Do women want to be working more, if only the kidsand their useless husbandswould let them? And do we know that more government support would enable them to do so and close the wage gap?
Actually, there is no evidence for either of these propositions. If women work fewer hours than men do, it appears to be because they want it that way. About two-thirds of the part-time workforce in the United States is female. According to a 2007 Pew Research survey, only 21 percent of working mothers with minor children want to be in the office full-time. Sixty percent say that they would prefer to work part-time, and 19 percent would like to give up their jobs altogether. For working fathers, the numbers are reversed: 72 percent want to work full-time and 12 percent part-time.
In fact, women choose fewer hoursdespite the resulting gap in earningsall over the world. That includes countries with generous family leave and child-care policies. Look at Iceland, recently crowned the worlds most egalitarian nation by the World Economic Forum. The country boasts a female prime minister, a law requiring that the boards of midsize and larger businesses be at least 40 percent female, excellent public child care, and a family leave policy that would make NOW members swoon. Yet despite successful efforts to get men to take paternity leave, Icelandic women still take considerably more time off than men do. They also are far more likely to work part-time. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), this queen of women-friendly countries has a bigger wage gapwomen make 62 percent of what men dothan the United States does.
Sweden, in many peoples minds the worlds gender utopia, also has a de facto mommy track. Sweden has one of the highest proportions of working women in the world and a commitment to gender parity thats close to a national religion. In addition to child care, the country offers paid parental leave that includes two months specifically reserved for fathers. Yet moms still take four times as much leave as dads do. (Women are also more likely to be in lower-paid public-sector jobs; according to sociologist Linda Haas, Sweden has one of the most sex-segregated labor markets in the world.) Far more women than men work part-time; almost half of all mothers are on the job 30 hours a week or less. The gender wage gap among full-time workers in Sweden is 15 percent. Thats lower than in the United States, at least according to the flawed data we have, but its hardly the feminist Promised Land.
The list goes on. In the Netherlands, over 70 percent of women work part-time and say that they want it that way. According to the Netherlands Institute for Social Research, surveys found that only 4 percent of female part-timers wish that they had full-time jobs. In the United Kingdom, half of female GPs work part-time, and the National Health Service is scrambling to cope with a dearth of doctor hours. Interestingly enough, countries with higher GDPs tend to have the highest percentage of women in part-time work. In fact, the OECD reports that in many of its richest countries, including Denmark, Sweden, Iceland, Germany, the U.K., and the U.S., the percentage of the female workforce in part-time positions has gone up over the last decade.
So it makes no sense to think of either the mommy track or the resulting wage differential as an injustice to women. Less time at work, whether in the form of part-time jobs or fewer full-time hours, is what many women want and what those who can afford it tend to choose. Feminists can object till the Singularity arrives that women are socialized to think that they have to be the primary parent. But after decades of feminism and Nordic engineering, the continuing female tropism toward shorter work hours suggests that that view is either false or irrelevant. Even the determined Swedes havent been able to get women to stick around the office.
That doesnt mean that the mommy track doesnt present a problem, particularly in a culture in which close to half of all marriages break down. A woman can have a baby, decide to reduce her hours and her pay, forgo a pension, and then, ten years later, watch her husband run off with the Pilates instructor. The problem isnt what it used to be when women had fewer degrees and less work experience during their childless years; women today are in better shape to jump-start their careers if need be. The risk remains, however.
Its not at all clear how to solve this problem or even if there is a solution, especially during these fiscally challenged days. But one thing is clear: the wage-gap debate ought to begin with the mommy track, not with proofy statistics.
Kay S. Hymowitz is a contributing editor of City Journal, the William E. Simon Fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and the author of Manning Up: How the Rise of Women Has Turned Men into Boys.
And what’s the problem with that? Next question...
Here are a few additional thoughts. Salary does not measure total compensation. Pension benefits are an important component of total compensation. Women tend to work in government (especially K-12) with vastly superior retirement compensation. The value of retirement compensation can as much as 50 percent additional compensation.
Women also tend to work in areas with more job stability. Taking a snapshot of salaries does not account for the value of job security. One way to account for job stability is to measure compensation over an extended period instead of just a snapshot. I have heard many government workers complain that they do not earn as much as private sector counterparts (largely no longer true except for top performers in high demand areas). Even if the compensation was lower for government workers, their earnings over an extended period would likely be higher. In addition, most individuals (risk averse) prefer stability over variability (risk takers).
Overall, women have some important advantages in the labor market. Misinformation by the left purposely ignores the disadvantages to gain additional advantages.
The term “mommy track” is insulting to those women. What’s wrong with families that want to raise their children and not just bear them? Nowadays, so-called working mothers deliver their children to nannies at birth and then shunt them off to day care and a pernicious pernicious public school system. Yes, this cannot be helped sometimes; but, still, the formerly abnormal has become the new normal.
And the 10th one means you'd better have an inheritance coming, or hope one of the Offspring becomes a stunning success. I'm betting on #3 becoming a cut-throat plaintiff's attorney. He got over 90% on the "Are you a Slytherin?" quiz when he was only 11.
If women don’t stay home with the kids, at least for most of the day, then institutions or maids are raising the next generation. It is not a good plan for the world. So long live the mommy track! Let’s not pretend parent women are the same as non parent women! They are different with different priorities and that is ok. Deal with it.
I chose the mommy track. No regrets.
A woman world earns what a woman’s world earn. Not everything is earned in money, and woman, like man, is not fed by bread alone.
Only retards like Obama and his fat loser wife can only see life as pilfering their faces like retard sodomites without a purpose and full of emptiness.
These are statistics from those who love the cock too much and hate children.
A better term would be “mothers who work at home.” Hey, we’re on the same side!
In my opinion, the problem with the phrase “mommy track” is that it identifies child-bearing and child-rearing as a deviation from the socially-expected role of a woman, which is to be a full-time employee throughout her life. There was a time when a “working mother” was an exception, in the sense of a mother holding paid employment outside the home.
(I never describe the years I spent at That Insurance Company as “when I was working,” but rather as, “when I was an employee.”)
Once, it was acknowledged that child-rearing is, in itself, a full-time task ... one that, if it is not done by the children’s mother or other family members, must be performed by paid employees. Is it really an improvement for the “default” assumption to be that each mother will pay other women (probably also mothers) to rear her children ... or is it nuts?
Well said — as usual.
To bad only the people who already know it is true will bother reading it.
Every woman I have ever worked with who had child(ren)did exactly the same thing.
Dialed down the stress and hours at the job, to be better able to handle our family lives.
Thank you!
There’s not a “gap”.
Women and men are fundamentally different. So, therefore, observing manifestations of those differences is trivial.
Why do you suppose that there is a big cry out there for “quality child care”? I knew my kids had quality child care because I was the one caring for them.
Me too. Walked away from a super job I knew would never come my way again.
It was incredibly hard, but no regrets either.
I can hire Dick or Jane, who are equally qualified. I can pay Jane less than Dick. Why would I ever hire Dick?
You could choose Dick because previous experiments at saving salary money have proven to be a fool’s errand when comparing for job effectiveness or productivity. Now if Jane were unmarried and childless, the scale becomes more even but I still wouldn’t try saving salary budget because it can become a false economy, especially if it contributes to turnover.
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