Monday, October 10, 2016

Are We Tricked or Trapped in the Gender Gap?

Frank Butler VS Annie Oakley: Anything you can do, I can do better.
Image from http://funguerilla.com/

The gender gap refers to the differences in pay between men and women, who are doing the same or comparable jobs. It is argued that in the USA women are earning anywhere from 0.77 to 0.95 cents for every dollar men earn. Until recently I believed the gender gap was factual and non-debatable. Until however, celebrity actress Kristin Bell starred in a two-minute satirical video on the topic called “Pinksourcing.”

Bell brings up issues for women around maternity leave, working conditions, and promotions. It wasn’t this Huffington Post video that shocked me, rather it was the reviews. I understand that reading the comments on any article or video online is surely to offend me in ways I didn’t know I could be offended, but it wasn’t the comments section either. It was the journalists, the professionals, and the reputable online news sources that disagreed that the gender gap is real.

Check out Pinksourcing video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_m5AlsQqcs

Google “Pinksourcing video” for a selection of reviews to chose from.

The first argument you will likely come across is that the gender gap isn’t real, because if it was, companies would only hire women. That argument can be shut down pretty quickly with the Civil Rights Act/Canadian Human Rights Act that prevents gender discrimination in the hiring process. Then there’s the argument that the gender gap has made significant gains (in other words, the gap is closing in to nothingness), in part to there being more women in the workplace and women earning a higher level of education. This argument has some weight to it, but it’s still missing some critical information. One of my favourite arguments however comes from Forbes, they argue that both the video and the gender gap are misleading because neither consider the different choices men and women make around education level, years of experience, type of job, and hours worked (Agness, 2016).


Agreed, men and women are definitely making different choices around these things, but it's important to acknowledge what is influencing these decisions. For example lets exclude education and look at years of experience, type of job and hours worked. In most developed countries it's women who are offered a substantial amount of maternity leave in comparison to men. The one province in Canada that offers fathers notable paternity leave is Quebec, which gives fathers 5 weeks of leave (Raphael, 2016). In this situation it's public policy that dictates one's choice around being at home or being at work.

Dennis Raphael (2016) points out that we're also seeing political ideologies that are influencing one's "choices." There is a greater push towards neoliberal priorities, which means putting more and more responsibility on the individual and less involvement from the state (ex: fewer social services). 

This is particularly an issue around early childhood education. At the moment childcare in Canada is neither funded or regulated until the age of 5 when children attends kindergarten – and in many places across the country it’s only half-day. Until then single mothers are to either pay unscrupulous amounts of money for childcare, or stay at home and live on social assistance, or for some partnered mothers they may continue their time away from work, should they be lucky enough to have a partner who can provide for the family on a sole income. 

The longer women are out of the workforce taking care of the family, the fewer hours they put in working; the fewer years of experience they gain in the workforce, the lower level jobs they are likely to have; and finally, the longer they’re unemployed caring for the family, the greater risk they’re in of losing their labour market job skills. Perhaps women could choose to work and build experience, work more hours, acquire more responsibilities at work, rather than stay at home, if men had more funded paternity leave and if there was national childcare which was both funded and regulated across the country.

Looking to our Nordic counterparts for influence, Canada could be doing more to integrate women back into the workplace with flexible work hours, create family-friendly policies, subsidized childcare, provide fathers with longer paternity leave, and give access to job-training programs (Raphael, 2016). These choices men and women, have to make around employment and building a family is called the gender trap which I acknowledge and argue, creates the gender gap.  

Raphael, D. (Ed.). (2016). Social determinants of health: Canadian perspectives (3rd ed.). Toronto: Canadian    
   Scholars Press, Canada. 

Agness, K. (Sept 16, 2016). Another Celebrity Wrong on the Pay Gap. Forbes. Retrieved from 
   http://www.forbes.com/sites/karinagness/2016/09/16/pinksourcing-is-the-latest-misleading-equal-pay-
   effort/#5a0994f170d9