The wage-gap thing is overstated. At least that has been my experience.
The HR wonks at one of the medical centers I worked at did a wage study years ago. There was a disparity in that men made more annually, but amongst hourly workers, it wasn't due to some sort of institutionalized sexism. The men worked more hours on average. Why? Women took much more unpaid leave (due to maternity, for the most part) and signed up for much fewer extra or OT shifts. When some women were polled and asked why they didn't volunteer for OT shifts or extra work as often as their male counterparts, most cited family responsibilities as the reason.
This is, of course, anecdotal, so your mileage may vary, but I can see it being the case across other industries, as well. Now, is it fair that women give birth and are often saddled with carrying little Johnny to the pediatrician every other week and Suzy to ballet class and have to grocery shop and do a thousand other household tasks more often than many of their male counterparts? Probably not, but the point remains: the so-called wage disparity isn't due to overt sexism by most industries - at least now and in the recent past - there are real, common-sense reasons why women often make less.
The HR wonks at one of the medical centers I worked at did a wage study years ago. There was a disparity in that men made more annually, but amongst hourly workers, it wasn't due to some sort of institutionalized sexism. The men worked more hours on average. Why? Women took much more unpaid leave (due to maternity, for the most part) and signed up for much fewer extra or OT shifts. When some women were polled and asked why they didn't volunteer for OT shifts or extra work as often as their male counterparts, most cited family responsibilities as the reason.
This is, of course, anecdotal, so your mileage may vary, but I can see it being the case across other industries, as well. Now, is it fair that women give birth and are often saddled with carrying little Johnny to the pediatrician every other week and Suzy to ballet class and have to grocery shop and do a thousand other household tasks more often than many of their male counterparts? Probably not, but the point remains: the so-called wage disparity isn't due to overt sexism by most industries - at least now and in the recent past - there are real, common-sense reasons why women often make less.
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