Friday, October 25, 2019
Female Discrimination In The Labor Force Essay -- Gender Discriminatio
 Female Discrimination in the Labor Force      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In the past decades there has been a dramatic increase in the number of  women participating in the labor force. This expansion has unfortunately shown  how women are still being treated as inferior citizens when comparing their  wages and the jobs they are hired for to that of men. Many women in similar  occupations as men, and having the same qualifications are only paid a fraction  of what their male counterparts are paid. The only reasonable explanation that  can be found for this income gap is discrimination. This unfair treatment shown  throughout the handouts illustrate how far people still have to go before equal  treatment becomes standard.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The increase in female participation started occurring during the 1970's.  The number of women in the civilian labor force jumped from 23 million in the  1960's to 31 million in the 1970's. This leap would continue and increase in  the 1980's and on into the 1990's. The result, in 1995, is a female labor force  that numbers over 60 million. This comprised 46 percent of the civilian work  force (10).  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  A reason for the rise in participation by women may be in the way women  saw marriage and children. Fewer women saw marriage as a settling down. Women  who had children began to return to their jobs. The number of working women  that were either married or had children or both increased dramatically. In  1965, women with children under 18 years of age numbered 35.0 percent of the  labor force. This number increased to 47.4 percent in 1975. In ten years it  was 62.1 percent and finally in 1995 it had grown to 69.7 percent (7). This  showed that the female attitude towards having children and marriage has changed.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  According to the handouts, in 1970 women were paid poorly when compared  to their male counterparts. The female worker had a median yearly earning of 19,  101 dollars. This was only 59.4 percent of what the males made. This does  start to change in the 1980's as female earnings rose to 60.2 percent of men's.  Five years later it had reached 64.6 percent. By 1990, the female's earnings  had risen to 71.6 percent of what a man would make (2).  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Women in the workplace have always been discriminated against. Ever  since the first women started to work...              ... that women were  in some way not as accomplished or competent as men. Yet, a more in depth  investigation would show that women are just as qualified, if not more so, than  men. A principal of equal pay for equal work should be employed by all  businesses and would definitely close the income gap.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Most people want to correct the unequal treatment of women in the work  force. One method that can be used to support equality would be to introduce a  federal legislation to guarantee equal pay for equal work if there isn't one  already. The logistical problem with this solution though would be great. How  would people measure the value of one person's work to another's? Who would  decide this and how would it be implemented? Much still has to be done before  this important issue is laid to rest.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  People's attitudes towards women in the work force is slowly starting to  change. More opportunities are appearing for women workers. The unequal  treatment of working women will take years to change, but change is occurring.  This topic will remain until the day people are treated and paid equally based  upon their abilities and not anything else.                       
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