10/6/2004
Politicizing the Pay Gap-Equal Pay for Equal Work

This has been a lefty leftist issue for the feminists as long as I can remember, and I’m sick of it. BTW, I not only hate her politics, but she’s a dog. Nevermind the glamorama glitz pics; with a little airbrushing, makeup, lighting, and a good photographer, you can turn the wicked witch of the west into Princess Di.
Anyway, let’s get on with the subject at hand, I digress. Abortion isn’t the only issue that the Billary Squad squawks about. In the “March for Women’s Lives” in Washington, Hillary spoke, “This administration is filled with people who…claim the pay gap between women and men is phony…” The term “pay gap” refers to the statistical observation that American women make 77 cents to every dollar earned by American men. For decades, militant feminists have maintained that the pay gap can only be explained by systematic workplace discrimination that puts less value on work done by women. But it’s actually a rhetorical contrivance deployed in the service of an anti-free market agenda.
In Appleton, Wisconsin, an assistant business editor chimed in with a column that included the following remarks: “Before seeing those numbers, I really thought women and men who do the same job would receive the same pay. For example, at most businesses, receptionists–who are typically women–are paid less than delivery personnel or those who work in the warehouse, who are typically men. I’m sorry, but that’s just not right. Is a receptionist’s work any less of value than someone who works in a warehouse?”
There is an obvious contradiction between the first sentence and the example she used in the next sentence. So Brian Farmer called her on the phone, and their conversation went something like this.
“Why should anyone be upset about the pay gap?” Brian asked.
She replied, “Because men and women should be treated as equals.”
“But the types of jobs done by women aren’t always the same as those done by men,” Brian countered.
“That doesn’t mean that discriminating doesn’t exist,” she rebutted.
Pointing out her flawed reasoning, when she used an example of two different jobs to support her arguments that men and women should get the same pay for the same job, Brian then asked, “If the receptionist wants the same pay for the same job, Brian then asked, “If the receptionist wants to make more money, why doesn’t she just apply for a job in the warehouse?”
“Look,” she said, “why don’t you just write a letter for the op-ed page?”
We couldn’t help but recall a line from an old ’80’s tune: “Put ‘em under pressure and you watch them fall apart.”
In any case, who do YOU think should decide how much a receptionist is worth compared to a warehouse worker–the government or the free market? And why should we believe that there would be no discrimination if we were to leave it up to the government to decide?
Any study of the pay gap and the reasons for its existence comes up with the following:
- Women leave the labor force for longer periods of time, primarily to bear and raise children. This slows career development, and the promotions and pay increases that go with enhanced work experience.
- Men are generally physically stronger than women, so they domincate employment in fields where the work is physically demanding (e.g., heavy industry, mining, construction) and where there is a greater chance of physical injury. These types of jobs command higher wages to compensate for the greater risk of bodily harm.
- Women work fewer hours per year, because more women work part-time, and more men work at jobs that are not only full-time, but offer overtime pay.
- Women choose certain lower paying occupations for a variety of reasons not related to pay, such as status and workplace environment. For example, most women prefer to be secretaries, rather than auto mechanics, even though auto machanics generally make more money.
What critics want us to believe is that the pay gap is a symptom of a despicable social problem. Namely, gender discrimination in the workplace. But I haven’t heard the answer to this very simple question: If such discrimination really exists, and a business could hire a woman to do a job for significantly less money than it would pay a man, why would any intelligent employer hire a man? It should be obvious that the free market competition would quickly eliminate any pay premium based on gender.
Why, then, do some people still want us to believe that the pay gap is due to job market discrimination against women? The answer is that some groups in society would benefit from policies that could be implemented, based on the assumption that such discrimination actually existed.
Comparable worth, pay equity, has been the most popular policy proposal put forward by feminists. It is based on the idea that wages and salaries should be calculated by the government on a scale of socioeconomic values that transcends the traditional economic forces of supply and demand. Each job is considered to have an intrinsic value to an employer, which proponents claim can be objectively determined. Some states actually attempted to implement comparable worth policies during the ’80’s, but the courts rejected them as a remedy for the alleged discrimination. Recent events show, though, those who want to expand the role of government in the workplace are not going to let this matter rest.
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