Should women get paid the same amount as men do for the same work?
6/5/2012 5:40:28 PM
Nope. [/thread]
6/5/2012 5:46:01 PM
They should get paid less than men, but more than blacks and gays.
6/5/2012 5:46:18 PM
So if women were paid more than men, then ^ and ^^ would not have a problem. Income disparity is ok with you guys.
6/5/2012 6:40:45 PM
you forgot a key element of the equation: who is doing a better job?
6/5/2012 6:43:45 PM
^ Same performance.
6/5/2012 6:45:32 PM
They should get paid whatever they can manage to get someone to pay them. If it is more than a man can get doing the same job, their benefit. If not, their loss. It is none of our business what contracts women freely negotiate with those they choose to associate.
6/5/2012 7:07:46 PM
"get paid" is passive voice and allows mouth-breathers to shift the responsibility to the person "managing to make whatever it is they can make others pay them."The question is: Should employers be able to discriminate pay wages and benefits solely on the basis of gender? Clearly the answer is no.
6/5/2012 7:49:40 PM
No, they shouldn't. However, the 70 cents on dollar statistic that gets thrown around so frequently is a bunch of crap. Rather than basing it off of average income for men vs. average income for men it should compare for same jobs not for total income earned, especially considering they types of jobs that are female dominated professions v. the type of jobs that are male dominated professions. Oh, and then throw in things like maternity leave, unpaid leave, amount of time off requested, willingness to relocate, average number of hours worked per week, etc. and you can see why there would be a significant disparity if you refuse to examine anything past average income.While it's not 1:1 on wages, it's a hell of a lot closer when it's actually measured that way.[Edited on June 5, 2012 at 8:38 PM. Reason : asdfs]
6/5/2012 8:25:51 PM
I'm a democrat and I know they're bringing this up to pander to women voters, but I genuinely doubt that there is that much discrimination going on. I'd be willing to bet there's something else going on, especially at the level of 70c/$1 ratio I keep hearing.
6/5/2012 8:26:06 PM
ZOMG, if the market called for fair wages, we'd have them!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11111111111But seriously, there are definitely things at play that people aren't considering. Women don't simply make less just because they're women.How about we talk about the growing number of women out earning their significant others and not sharing that money in the relationship like men have (historically). [Edited on June 5, 2012 at 8:30 PM. Reason : ]
6/5/2012 8:28:04 PM
I love how you ask this in the soapbox -- a place dominated by men and hasn't seen a woman in years.Much like the real lives of the all those who post above and below this post.
6/5/2012 9:29:28 PM
While there are few women here, there is no shortage of white knights jumping at the chance to defend poor, fragile, helpless women that have been kept down by the white male power structure.
6/5/2012 9:42:44 PM
I'm really looking forward to str8foolish/mcdanger pointing out how we're all misogynists for not agreeing with the $.70:$1.00 "statistic."
6/5/2012 9:50:51 PM
they get paid less to offset the inevitable sexual harassment lawsuits and paid baby-leave.
6/5/2012 9:57:05 PM
6/5/2012 10:05:06 PM
have any of you ever actually worked with women before?if so, you know why they get paid less.[Edited on June 5, 2012 at 10:11 PM. Reason : and because of this, nobody gives a shit.]
6/5/2012 10:10:48 PM
^^http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male%E2%80%93female_income_disparity_in_the_United_StatesI know it's wikipedia, but some of the rough data is there. From what I've seen the more you break it down, and the closer you get to actual job to job and hour to hour comparisons the less severe the disparity is, generally speaking.[Edited on June 5, 2012 at 10:26 PM. Reason : sdf]
6/5/2012 10:19:47 PM
^^ lmao
6/5/2012 10:41:15 PM
^^Your link to Wikipedia doesn't actually support what you're saying. That page is all over the place.Could you elaborate about this "rough data"?[Edited on June 5, 2012 at 11:57 PM. Reason : ?]
6/5/2012 11:55:19 PM
In what way does it not? Total income is actually closer to 77 cents on the dollar, but when you start to factor in things like education, hours worked, etc. you see more of that gap eliminated, again, not all, but significant portions.
6/6/2012 12:13:09 AM
6/6/2012 12:28:19 AM
6/6/2012 9:10:34 AM
^ While I agree to an extent, it's not like employers don't low ball men as well. The difference being that men will actually negotiate for higher pay rather than taking what's offered.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 10:32 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2012 10:31:51 AM
6/6/2012 10:57:58 AM
women only get paid 76 cents on the dollar if you don't correct for occupation and education level. Once you correct for one I think it's 88 cents, and correcting for both you get 92 percent.That's not even correcting for organizational position. If you work overtime and get promoted then it's not a fair comparison to someone in the same industry with the same degrees. I'm not implying that men are more likely to do this. However, it is true that average age of first marriage for men is about 2 years earlier than women, meaning that they have 2 extra years spent without relationship time commitments, and that time probably goes to career investment which is probably reflective of both education and in-company investment.In other words, there is a good case to say that the combination of negotiating power and sexist preference in determining pay accounts for AT MOST a 8% difference in pay.I'm not saying that's not a problem. It is. But we have bigger problems.The 76 cents on the dollar doesn't even correct for workforce participation:men: 71.2 %women: 58.6 %Let's faithfully do the correction:men earn 100 cents, multiply by relative time worked100*0.712 = 71.2women earn 76 cents, multiply by relative time worked76*0.586 = 44.536normalize to get:44.5/71.2 = 62.6 cents on the dollarSo let's get this straight. Women miss out on the following earnings: - 37.5 cents because of all factors combined, mainly career selection and family decisions - 8 cents AT MOST because of negotiating ability combined with other factorsAnd again, people at retirement age grew up in a world where sex discrimination was real. The above numbers are all bull because they count 50 year old women who were educated in a bigoted world.In other words, everyone has framed the issue completely wrong.
6/6/2012 11:24:29 AM
6/6/2012 11:51:44 AM
6/6/2012 12:15:50 PM
6/6/2012 12:48:43 PM
What's strange is that history shows a sort of continuum since the past of the pay gap slowly decreasing.So I'm just wondering...when did it stop being discrimination and start being these myriad other theories? Or was it always this way, and the pay gaps were never about discrimination at all? Did women in 1970 just take 80 days a year vacation or what?[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 12:57 PM. Reason : .]
6/6/2012 12:56:21 PM
6/6/2012 1:01:58 PM
6/6/2012 1:06:07 PM
6/6/2012 1:07:52 PM
6/6/2012 1:16:31 PM
6/6/2012 1:35:41 PM
6/6/2012 1:40:03 PM
6/6/2012 1:42:06 PM
6/6/2012 2:00:54 PM
6/6/2012 2:10:00 PM
6/6/2012 2:45:07 PM
^^ Unless she's superwoman, she won't be staying at home much as a single mother.I agree, becoming a single mother probably ranks among the worst possible things you could do for career advancement. The rates of single motherhood have been going through the roof recently, and it shouldn't be surprising if we see an age-adjusted, profession-and-education-adjusted, decrease in the F:M earning ratio as a result of that. That's one possible example of how women can wind up making less for the same job. It's not a stretch to imagine that you won't go as far in your job if you're loaded with other responsibilities outside of your work.Plus, the idea of "staying at home" has a whole lot of gray area. I imagine most people would take the standard 3 months, but people will take everything in-between that and decades. This time is also highly subject to economic pressures.If you think about it, the traditional family structure made perfect sense under the assumption that men had greater earning potential (which was entirely true). If the literal gender discrimination is gone, then it might only be a matter of time before family structures adjust to the optimal economic behavior. But we also have lots of negative trends to point to that paint a different picture.Removing the father role from a large fraction of households out there would be disaster for gender equality, simply because it defaults to placing the upbringing responsibility on women. But I know a lot of single fathers too, so I don't really know what kind of situation that's creating.[Edited on June 6, 2012 at 2:52 PM. Reason : ^^]
6/6/2012 2:51:59 PM
6/6/2012 3:01:14 PM
6/6/2012 3:15:13 PM
^ I remember seeing that a few years ago and was going to bring it up here.
6/7/2012 8:44:13 AM
6/7/2012 8:57:07 AM
save the women and children first.---so no, they shouldn't.[Edited on June 7, 2012 at 9:12 AM. Reason : trololo]
6/7/2012 9:11:49 AM
6/7/2012 9:27:19 AM
^and in YOUR reality you can eliminate all bias. impressive
6/7/2012 9:41:01 AM
Yep I said that. What we can do is take off our Ayn Rand blinders and address bias instead of pretending it doesn't exist or doesn't matter.
6/7/2012 9:59:58 AM
It's a curious proposition that the libertarians make regarding civil rights and fairness.Do people have a right to fairness? That's a valid question, and most people would answer "no". However, it's interesting to consider a world unfair to women, agreement on the fact, and inaction by the government. If you've identified clear inequality, then is it a defensible position to wholeheartedly be against the practice and maintain that the government shouldn't do anything about it?Ethics itself should dictate that an action exists. Even if it's other people making these unequal and immoral decisions, there should be something that you, as someone who recognizes the inequality, does about it. The inherent human condition demands it. Our founders made similar statements about rights - that they are self-obvious and not granted by any government. That's consistent with the belief of an absolute and objective moral framework we should aspire to, and I think that all the ideals of the civil rights movement should be included in this framework. The issue is that some people believe the government shouldn't take action on this.So we then accept an absolute moral framework, and within that framework find actionable and in-actionable items for the government. Is human trafficking the business of government? I would venture a guess that the libertarians among us would agree with me in answering "yes".If the line doesn't reach to equal opportunity and economic fairness to all, how do we draw the line between what is government's business and what isn't?
6/7/2012 10:08:44 AM