im not trolling you i promiseweve had multipage threads before concerning the merits of paying burger flippers more for no real reasonwhy is paying women more for certain jobs out of the question?are manly jobs deserving of more money just because women dont find them interesting / fulfilling ?
9/30/2014 2:48:02 PM
9/30/2014 2:49:52 PM
9/30/2014 3:17:58 PM
you provide a quota only available to men, this will end the gender disparity[Edited on September 30, 2014 at 3:22 PM. Reason : another thing that is done]
9/30/2014 3:22:04 PM
y0willy0
9/30/2014 10:59:21 PM
If you overlay years of experience vs pay scatterplots for men and women, they should be the same.
10/1/2014 1:02:54 AM
For the same job and if they average the same number of hours worked and controlling for all other variables, sure.If you can actually isolate it down so that the only difference is gender then I would agree with you, but just plotting years of experience, pay, and gender... no.
10/1/2014 2:26:38 AM
10/1/2014 4:46:22 AM
10/1/2014 9:10:55 AM
10/1/2014 10:40:49 AM
Do you truly think that women are paid less for the same work? Why would any business ever hire a man again?
10/1/2014 1:00:36 PM
10/1/2014 5:02:17 PM
is it not a fact that women make less money on average? particularly, women who are having children that are the subject of that post? yes. the contributing factors don't matter in regards to the issue discussed in the quoted post post. as long as that's true, mrfrog is probably right that increasing the amount of maternity leave would exacerbate the issue and increase any wage disparity because if women are the lower-earning partner it makes sense that they would be the one to take off time more often. the point i made was that when paid eave that is only available to men has been implemented, the disparity narrows and the social attitude towards taking time off even changed. i also made a point about the current existing regressive nature of reproduction that already exists without paying for time off. i think you saw the first 5 words and just assumed i'm making a point that i'm not and ran with it
10/1/2014 5:39:54 PM
^ Negotiating skill is probably more important than any of those.
10/1/2014 5:40:22 PM
10/1/2014 8:45:32 PM
10/1/2014 9:01:19 PM
both of you need to go read my comment again
10/1/2014 10:38:19 PM
10/2/2014 4:45:50 AM
Fine, I'll ignore the two conclusions you made from the "fact" that women earn less and ask...
10/2/2014 9:19:25 AM
it is a fact (it's not under debate), and because of that fact it makes sense that increased unpaid leave exacerbates the issue because the lesser funded partner will be the one who takes off more timeoff the top of my head, paternity-only leave is utilized in Sweden, Iceland, Norway, Quebec and some (many?) other parts of CanadaRegarding social changes:http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2179070
10/2/2014 9:43:47 AM
What do you mean by "paternity-only" leave?All of your examples are shared leave and most have maternity leave on top of that.My point is I'm unable to find a single location on the planet where paternity leave is available to fathers and maternity leave is not available to mothers. Maybe I'm just misinterpreting what you mean by "paternity-only".I get it now; you mean when men get paternity leave at all.[Edited on October 2, 2014 at 9:58 AM. Reason : .]
10/2/2014 9:53:39 AM
some part of the paid leave is only available to the fatheri think you need to go back and read my posts again
10/2/2014 9:54:14 AM