http://ms.foundation.org/newsroom/in-the-news/why-the-economy-hurts-women-more

Why the Economy Hurts Women More [New York Times]


28 July 2008

Letter to the Editor by Sara K. Gould


Re “Women Are Now Equal as Victims of Poor Economy” (front page, July 22):

After years of increasing participation in the work force, women, you report, have reached a much less desirable milestone: a fall in the percentage who are working. But contrary to the suggestion that women are now on par with men because they’re leaving the work force at similar rates, we know that women have always lagged well behind in good times and bad.

This is especially true for low-income women and women of color who face multiple barriers to economic security: race, gender and class.

Today, despite decades of struggle for job access and pay equity, women are paid 77 cents for each dollar a man makes; the disparity is worse for African-American women, who earn 62 cents, and Latinas, who earn 53 cents.

Nearly 10.5 million women are single parents (as compared with 2.5 million single fathers). For them, opting out for any reason — like motherhood or education — is not viable.

Already disadvantaged by years of workplace and legislative failures, women and their families face an increasingly insecure future if policies are not adjusted to meet their ever more pressing needs.

Sara K. Gould
President and Chief Executive
Ms. Foundation for Women


[Source: The New York Times]

   

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