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Dr.
Warren Farrell is the author of many books,
including two award-winning international best-sellers,
Why Men Are The Way They Are plus
The Myth of Male Power. His most recent books are
Women Can’t Hear What Men Don’t Say, which was a
selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club, and
Father and Child Reunion about how fathers can be
successful at both work and home. His latest book, just published
this year,
Why Men Earn More: The Startling Truth Behind the Pay Gap and
What Women Can Do About It, helps both employers and
employees understand what makes a company want to increase an
employee’s pay. His books are published in over 50 countries, and in
10 languages.
Dr. Warren Farrell is available for expert
testimony to help fathers stay equally involved in their children's
lives after divorce.
CLICK HERE to contact Dr. Warren Farrell for information.
For more about Dr. Farrell or his books, see
www.WarrenFarrell.net (Why Men Earn More)
www.WarrenFarrell.biz (Father and Child Reunion)
www.WarrenFarrell.org
(The Myth of Male Power)
www.WarrenFarrell.info (Women Can’t Hear What Men Don’t Say)
www.WarrenFarrell.us (Why Men Are The Way They Are)
www.WarrenFarrell.ws (The Liberated Man)
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Guest Article... |
How I Began the Discovery that Men
Earn Less than Women for the Same Work
by
Warren Farrell, Ph.D. 
If
male bosses are to blame for discrimination, why are
women who own their own businesses earning only 49%
of their male counterparts—that is, why are women
netting less when they are their own bosses than
when they have male bosses?
As I explored businesses owned by women versus men,
I discovered that nowhere is the male-female
difference in priorities clearer than in the
difference between these businesses. I discovered
how running one’s own business tended either to
follow what I came to call “the high-pay formula” in
exchange for lifestyle trade-offs, or follow “the
low-pay formula” in exchange for lifestyle payoffs.
I began to scout around. I discovered that the U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics found as long ago as the
early 1980s that companies paid men and women equal
money when their titles were the same, their
responsibilities the same, and their
responsibilities were of equal size—for example,
both regional buyers for Nordstrom’s, not one a
local and one a regional buyer. But although this
was published in the official publication of the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, I had never read of
the study in a single paper or heard of it in the
media.
To my surprise (in those years of my innocence),
once gender equality was found, the gender
comparison was not only ignored but never updated.
At the same time, a longitudinal survey found that
when women and men started at the same time as
engineers; worked in the same work settings; with
equal professional experience, training, family
status, and absences; the female engineers received
the same pay. It too was neither publicized nor
updated. I began to see that we study what gets
funded, and what gets funded depends a lot on what’s
likely to be found.
“Is it possible,” I asked, “that men and women have
different work goals and treat work differently?” If
so, would pinpointing these differences be more
helpful to women than assuming male bosses didn’t
value them?
As I freed my mind to consider alternative
perspectives, I vaguely recalled a statistic in
Jessie Bernard’s The Future of Marriage, one of the
favorite books among the early feminists. I had
half-registered this statistic at the time, but
probably discarded it from full consideration
because it created too much cognitive dissonance
with my assumptions of discrimination against women.
I pulled it off the shelf for a second read.
Yes, there it was, in an appendix: Census Bureau
figures show that even during the 1950s, (which Alex
studies in ancient history class!) there was less
than a 2% pay gap between never married women and
men, and never-married white women between 45 and 54
earned 106% of what their never-married white male
counterparts made.
I thought about these findings in relation to
affirmative action. Obviously, this was prior to
affirmative action. In fact, this pay equality had
occurred even prior to the Equal Pay Act of 1963.
And prior to the current feminist movement.
I was sure this example, though, was an aberration.
I began checking. Of course, almost all studies
showed men earned more, but as soon as I checked on
unmarried women who had worked every year since
leaving school, I found that they too earned
slightly more than their male counterparts—and that
was as far back as 1966. And in 1969, even as I was
claiming discrimination against female professors
while doing my doctorate at NYU, nationwide, female
professors who had never been married and never
published earned 145% of their counterpart male
colleagues. This is not a typo: The women earned 45%
more than the men.
A feminist colleague objected with a half-smile,
“Never-married women are winners; never-married men
are losers.” She clarified, “I mean never-married
men are not as educated, are less likely to work
hard. That’s why women don’t marry them.
Never-married women can take care of themselves, so
they don’t get married.”
I checked. Sure enough, never-married women were
more educated. So, I decided to check out the latest
data among educated men and women who worked
full-time. The results? The men earn only 85% of
what the women earn; or put another way, the women
earn 117% of what the men earn.
If all these findings had a common theme, it was,
“It’s marriage and children, stupid!” Well, with
each chapter of Why Men Earn More, we’ll see more
about how our paycheck is influenced by our family
role, and how we can use this information to tailor
our family’s need for our income versus our time.
When I shared these findings with some of my
colleagues, the response (aside from having fewer
colleagues!) from a couple of them was, “Not so
fast... it’s really the part-time women who are
subject to discrimination.” Maybe. So I checked that
out, too.
To get 2004 data on part-time workers required
obtaining unpublished Census Bureau data. I was
surprised at what it revealed: a part-time working
woman makes $1.10 for every dollar made by her male
counterpart. (Men and women who work part-time both
average 20 hours a week.)
© 2005, Warren Farrell 
Dr. Warren Farrell
is the author of many books, including two award-winning
international best-sellers, Why Men Are The Way They Are plus
The Myth of Male Power. His most recent books are Women
Can’t Hear What Men Don’t Say, which was a selection of the
Book-of-the-Month Club, and Father and Child Reunion about
how fathers can be successful at both work and home. His latest
book, just published this year, Why Men Earn More: The Startling
Truth Behind the Pay Gap and What Women Can Do About It, helps
both employers and employees understand what makes a company want to
increase an employee’s pay. His books are published in over 50
countries, and in 10 languages.
Dr. Warren Farrell is available for expert
testimony to help fathers stay equally involved in their children's
lives after divorce.
CLICK HERE to contact Dr. Warren Farrell for information.
www.WarrenFarrell.net (Why Men Earn More)
www.WarrenFarrell.biz (Father and Child Reunion)
www.WarrenFarrell.org (The Myth of Male Power)
www.WarrenFarrell.info (Women Can’t Hear What Men Don’t Say)
www.WarrenFarrell.us (Why Men Are The Way They Are)
www.WarrenFarrell.ws (The Liberated Man)

Copyright 2005 Warren Farrell, Ph.D., all rights
reserved
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