If, for the same work, women make only 77
cents for every dollar a man makes, why don’t businesses hire only women? Wages are the biggest expense for most businesses. So, hiring only women would reduce costs by
nearly a quarter – and that would go right to the bottom line. Don’t businesses want to be profitable? Or, are they just really bad at math? Well, actually, it’s the feminists, celebrities
and politicians spreading this wage gap myth who have the math problem. Here’s why: The 77-cents-on-the-dollar statistic is calculated
by dividing the median earnings of all women working full-time by the median earnings of
all men working full-time. In other words, if the average income of all
men is, say, 40,000 dollars a year, and the average annual income of all women is, say,
30,800 dollars, that would mean that women earn 77 cents for every dollar a man earns. 30,800 divided by 40,000 equals .77. But these calculations don’t reveal a gender
wage injustice because it doesn’t take into account occupation, position, education or
hours worked per week. Even a study by the American Association of
University Women, a feminist organization, shows that the actual wage gap shrinks to
only 6.6 cents when you factor in different choices men and women make. And the key word here is “choice.” The small wage gap that does exist has nothing
to do with paying women less, let alone with sexism; it has to do with differences in individual
career choices that men and women make. In 2009, the U.S. Department of Labor released
a paper that examined more than 50 peer-reviewed studies and concluded that the oft-cited 23
percent wage gap “may be almost entirely the result of individual choices being made
by both male and female workers.” Well, let’s look at some of those choices. Georgetown University compiled a list of the
five best-paying college majors, and the percentage of men or women majoring in those fields: Number 1 best-paying major: Petroleum Engineering:
87% male Number 2: Pharmaceutical Sciences: 48% male
3: Mathematics and Computer Science: 67% male 4: Aerospace Engineering: 88% male
5: Chemical Engineering: 72% male Notice that women out-represent men in only
one of the five top-paying majors – by only a few percentage points. Now consider the same study’s list of the
five worst paying college majors: Number 1: Counseling and Psychology: 74% female
Number 2: Early Childhood Education: 97% female 3: Theology and Religious Vocations: 66% male
4: Human Services and Community Organization: 81% female
5: Social Work: 88% female Here, it’s the women who lead in all but
one category. Even within the same profession, men and women
make different career choices that impact how much money they make. Take nursing, where male nurses on the whole
earn 18% more than female nurses. The reason? Male nurses gravitate to the best-paying nursing
specialties, they work longer hours, and disproportionately find jobs in cities with the highest compensation. Now, here’s how one expert on nursing compensation,
Professor Linda Aiken of the University of Pennsylvania, sums up the data: “Career
choices and educational differences explain most, if not all, the gender gap in nursing.” The Department of Labor paper concluded that
once these differences are accounted for across all professions, the unexplained wage gap
is somewhere between 4.8 and 7 percent – almost identical to the 6.6 percentage gap found
by the AAUW. But why is there any gap at all? No one knows for sure, as both the AAUW and
the Labor Department concede. There are so many variables that drive wages
that no single study can cover them all. Few wage gap studies control for variables
such as dangerous work environment; men are vastly overrepresented, for example, on oil
rigs. And here’s another variable: men are more
willing and able to work long hours without advance notice. According to Harvard economist Claudia Goldin,
even if two lawyers have the same education, same specialty, and work the same number
of hours — firms pay more to someone who is willing to always be “on call” and ready
to be in the office when the firm needs them, as opposed to wanting a more regular schedule. This isn’t sexism, it’s just common sense. With more realistic categories and definitions,
whatever wage gap remains would certainly narrow to point of vanishing. So it seems that business leaders aren’t
bad at math simply because they don’t only hire women. Those who claim that for the same work women
earn 77 cents on the dollar compared to men, on the other hand, are not merely bad at math
--but at telling the truth. I’m Christina Hoff Sommers of the American
Enterprise Institute for Prager University.
I'm in love with Christina Hoffman-Summers.
I knew it
When wil Dennis Prager reveal his true power level and lead us in a fascist revolt?