ha, its not a pay gap. its an occupation gap. there are more unemployed men because the united states has been shipping traditionally male-dominated jobs oversees causing higher unemployment for that group. they are using that to pretend there is a pay gap.
you want to solve this, then start convincing men to take jobs in traditionally female-dominated spaces.
Thank you for pointing out the flaw in the comments, let’s not let Lemmy turn into MGTOW or some shit
A_Union_of_Kobolds
What’s this? Another group of kobolds? How quaint!
Hey now I’ve been here - oh I see.
:ahem: in that case, our Union Floor is currently housed in Sigil, if you’re interested in signing a card.
Ooh, how exotic! We’ve never been to Sigil! Or away from our native plane at all, for that matter. Maybe we can find a way to attend…
The article mentions a number of troubling ways boys are doing worse than girls. Rates of suicide are much higher. There’s a gap in educational attainment:
On average, across every subject at GCSE, boys’ results are half a grade lower than girls’. At A-level, girls outperform boys by an average of more than a grade and a half across their best three subjects. Boys are also twice as likely as girls to be excluded from school, while in British universities, female students outnumber males by three to two.
In decades past, we rightly built programs to ensure that girls received a good schooling and were prepared for post secondary education. Boys need similar programs.
Yeah, you can just look at what happens when men do take jobs in female-dominated industries: https://www.ecu.edu.au/newsroom/articles/research/female-nurses-face-significant-gender-pay-gap
I don’t really like how this article is presented.
New research from Edith Cowan University (ECU) found that a gender pay gap of 4% existed at the six-month mark, widening to 13% at the three-year mark
In this study, men at three years earned $39.50 per hour compared to women who earned $38 per hour
That’s a 4% gap at 3 years when looking at hourly wage. It’s still bad but not 13%. Someone working more hours should be paid more in total, no?
The findings show men could be receiving penalty payments associated with working weekends and non-sociable hours, with women partaking in Dr Doleman’s study working on average 32 hours a week, compared to the men, who worked 36 hours a week
What about men and women at 3 years? The gap in hours must be smaller, as this would imply a 17% gap at 3 years, not a 13% one: ($39.5 * 36) / ($38 * 32) ≈ 1.17.
Still, if men work worse hours, shouldn’t they be paid more on average? I’m unsure about Australia but hours worked during night-shift on Sundays or on holidays must legally have increased pay in Germany (up to 190% from 12 am to 4 am on Christmas for example. It’s also tax-exempt!).
Assuming the reason why fewer women work these hours is childcare (which it frequently is) then access to affordable childcare should be expanded. But that’s not an issue with more men in female-dominated issues but rather a systemic problem imo.
Furthermore, research has found that men were being promoted more quickly following graduation and that there was a disproportionate number of men sitting in executive roles within the healthcare institutions.
Yeah, that’s bad. I do wonder whether “quickly” refers to “total hours worked” or “time employed” as men work more hours on average. Women should be promoted as quickly as men based on total hours of experience. The executive issue still remains though.
[H]ealthcare institutions should consider alternative working arrangements for female nurses.
A minor nitpick: the suggestion at the bottom should apply to every nurse, regardless of gender. After all, everyone would benefit from being able to work more flexible shifts - be it nurses, their children or their patients (the last one because nobody can keep high care standards for 12 hours).
“Our education system is not working for boys,” the report warns. “From the day they start primary school, to the day they leave higher education, the progress of boys lags behind girls.” One of Sir Keir Starmer’s government “milestones” is to ensure that 75 per cent of reception-age children are ready for school. The figure is currently 67 per cent, but this conceals a huge gender gap: 75 per cent of girls are school-ready, compared with just 60 per cent of boys.
…
Suicide is the biggest cause of death among young men. “Between the ages of 15 and 19, for every girl that took their own life, almost three and a half boys did likewise,” the report notes. “A man in the East Midlands is six times more likely to take [his] own life than a woman in London.”