“Women all over America deserve a raise,” Hillary Clinton has
said, again and again. “There’s no discount for being a woman — groceries don’t
cost us less, rent doesn’t cost us less, so why should we be paid less?”
Depending upon which numbers you choose, women in America
make 77 cents or 79 cents for every dollar men make. These numbers come from
the U.S. Census Bureau, 77 cents to the dollar from the 2010 Current Population
Survey, and an increase to 79.5 as of 2014.
What Clinton is saying in essence is that if a male family
practice doctor makes $160,000, a female family practice doctor only makes
$126,400. If a male schoolteacher makes $56,610, a female teacher only makes
$44,722.
An analysis by Colin Combs at the National Center for Policy
Analysis (NCPA) tells us; “The claim that women only make 77 [or 79] cents for
every dollar a man makes is usually followed by a call for a whole new wave of
regulations and pay mandates to stop this discrimination. The gender pay gap is
undeniably real; men earn more than women, on average. The question is ‘Why?’”
Partly, it is in how the numbers are determined, which is
illustrated by the fact that the Bureau of Labor Statistics determined that
women make 83 cents for every dollar men earned in 2014, not 77 or 79 cents per
dollar men earned. But there are other factors that must be considered in this
assertion.
One of those factors is using the average pay for all men
and the average pay for all women as the standard for analysis, about which
Combs wrote: “What these statistics reveal is not what people are being paid
for the same work, but what the average full-time working woman makes against
the average full-time working man. It ignores differences in occupation. The
average surgeon makes more than the average librarian, so if more men choose to
be surgeons and more women choose to be librarians (which they do), this will
be reflected in their average wage.” In reality, it is “unequal pay for unequal
work,” Combs wrote.
The fact is that women voluntarily choose lower paying
occupations, such as teaching, psychology and nursing, while men head toward
computer science and engineering. Married women
often reduce their participation in the job market for family reasons, and many
other women are self-employed and run their own businesses.
When adjusted for these factors, the results show that women do earn
less than men, but only 5 to 7 cents less per dollar, not the much-heralded 21
or 23 cents.
The reasons for this smaller difference are not clear, Combs
writes. Such things as salary negotiating skills or women being more risk-averse
than men are suspected factors. Since
the true factors have not been determined, efforts to correct the difference
will likely misfire; to solve a problem you first need to identify the problem.
The NCPA analysis quotes data from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics:
■ Women’s
inflation-adjusted wages have been increasing at a rate significantly higher
than men’s, or rising even while men’s wages fall.
■ While
the real wages of both men and women without a high school diploma have fallen,
this decrease is three times worse for men than for women.
■ Women’s
wages have been rising, even as the wages of men with a high school diploma or
associate’s degree have been falling. Women are much more likely than men to interrupt
their work for familial reasons, such as maternity leave.
Combs cites a Labor Department study conducted by CONSAD
Research Corporation saying the 77 cent figure is misused and overshadows many
real gains made by women since the 1970s. This is being done “to advance public
policy agendas without fully explaining the reasons behind the gap,” the study
said.
Never being one to let mere facts interfere with a good
opportunity for demagoguery and pandering, Clinton charges ahead with her
pledge to use government to get women a raise that they have largely already
gained without her help.
“Our false preoccupation with pay equity is not costless,”
said the Hoover Institution’s Richard A. Epstein, “for it leads to bad labor
market regulations that hurt all workers.” Regulations imposed to achieve
equality ultimately negatively affect the job market for both women and men.
Government tinkering with business elements it really knows
nothing about, all to fix a small problem that it doesn’t understand is bad
government. But bad government is a product that the Left produces in
abundance.
This issue demonstrates how the Left is either unaware of,
or simply chooses to ignore economic principles in order to pander to a special
interest group to garner votes. Jobs have value based upon the dynamics of each
business, and each business has its own dynamics. A government
one-size-fits-all solution to this is, to be kind, highly unlikely to succeed.
An electorate that does not investigate issues and votes
instead on emotion will help usher in more harmful policies like those that
have prevented the U.S. from recovering from the recession that ended seven
years ago.
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