1 / 18

Chapter 7

Chapter 7. Employment. ________________________. Women’s Employment Rates and Occupational Choices. Employment rates Dramatic increase in women’s labor force participation in recent decades 1970: 30% of married women with children under age 6 in paid labor force

mahola
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 7 Employment ________________________

  2. Women’s Employment Rates and Occupational Choices Employment rates • Dramatic increase in women’s labor force participation in recent decades • 1970: 30% of married women with children under age 6 in paid labor force • 2007: 62% of married women with children under age 6 in paid labor force • Explanations for increased participation • Women’s movement • Higher educational attainment • Economic necessity __________________________

  3. Women’s Employment Rates and Occupational Choices Occupational choices • 20 occupations with lowest percentage of women: construction, installation, maintenance, repair; production; transportation • 20 occupations with highest percentage of women: health care, office and administrative work, teaching, caring for young children • Other dimensions of occupational segregation by gender • Occupational segregation by ethnicity • Ethnic differences among women not as great as gender differences __________________________

  4. Gender Differences in Leadership and Job Advancement Leadership positions • Women constitute half of paid labor force, but very few of top leadership positions • Glass escalator: Even in female-dominated fields, men often earn more and are promoted faster • Glass ceiling: Invisible but powerful barriers that prevent women from advancing beyond a certain level • Glass cliff: Women leaders more likely to be given units with high risk of failure • Token women often are perceived and treated negatively • Sticky floor: Women have little or no job ladder, or path, to higher positions • Maternal wall: Women get less desirable assignments, lower salaries, and more limited advancement opportunities once they become mothers (Rhode & Williams, 2007) ___________________________

  5. Gender Differences in Leadership and Job Advancement Barriers that hinder women’s advancement • Limited mentors and social networks • Discrimination: Unfavorable treatment based on gender • Stereotypes • Successful manager seen as having male gender-stereotypic traits • Discrimination against women managers who are not “feminine” • In-group favoritism • Perceived threat __________________________

  6. Gender Differences in Leadership and Job Advancement Women as leaders • Three types of leaders • Transformational: Set high standards and serve as role models by mentoring and empowering their subordinates • More characteristic of women leaders • Linked to higher ratings of effectiveness • Transactional: Clarify workers’ responsibilities, monitor their work, reward them for meeting objectives, correct their mistakes • More characteristic of men leaders • Laissez-faire: Take little responsibility for managing _________________________

  7. Gender Differences in Salaries Comparative salaries • In 2009, women earned 77 cents for each dollar men earned • Salary discrepancies by gender and ethnicity • Salary discrepancies by gender and age • Salary discrepancies by gender, ethnicity, and education • Salary discrepancies within selected occupations • Cumulative effect of gender pay gap __________________________

  8. Gender Differences in Salaries Reasons for differences in salaries • Gender differences in investments in the job • Salaries reflect investments in human capital; because of family responsibilities, women, relative to men, reduce their investment in their education and jobs • Occupational segregation • Women’s occupations devalued relative to men’s • Salary negotiations • Women less likely to bargain • Wage discrimination • Differential payment for work that has equal or very similar value to employer • Motherhood penalty • Mothers earn significantly less than childless women, even with comparable education, work experience, and job characteristics • Fatherhood wage premium • Fathers earn more than men without children _________________________

  9. Women’s Job Satisfaction Gender differences in satisfaction • No gender differences in overall job satisfaction • Many sources of satisfaction • Paradox of the contented female worker __________________________

  10. Women’s Job Satisfaction Job satisfaction of sexual minorities • Workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation • Related to lower satisfaction, higher psychological distress • Concerns about coming out • Benefits • Drawbacks __________________________

  11. The Older Woman Worker Employment rates • Why do older women work? • Entering the workforce in later life • Age discrimination in the workplace • Double standard of aging __________________________

  12. Changing the Workplace Organizational procedures and policies • Pay equity: pay policies based on workers’ worth, not their gender or ethnicity • Affirmative action: positive steps taken by employing agency to ensure that workplace provides equal opportunity for all • Misperceptions of affirmative action • Effectiveness of affirmative action • Other organizational procedures __________________________

  13. Changing the Workplace Strategies for women • Get access to information • Join with others who experience similar inequities __________________________

  14. Retirement The retirement decision • Factors that influence the decision to retire • Gender differences in experiences of retirement • Effect of work identity on women’s retirement decision • Reasons for early retirement • Health • Caregiver role _________________________

  15. Retirement Adjustment to retirement • Initial time of marital conflict • Eventual good adjustment • Women may take longer • Associated with good health, adequate income, high activity level • Effects of multiple roles ___________________________

  16. Retirement Leisure activities in retirement • Gender differences • Women: social activities, crafts • Men: physical activities, spectator sports • Factors affecting leisure activity • Age • Amount of free time • Availability of transportation and programs • Varieties of leisure activity • Pursue interests or more education • Volunteer • Become an advocate or activist __________________________

  17. Economic Issues in Later Life Poverty • Income gap between women and men increases in retirement • Lower lifetime earnings for women • Reduced time in labor force • Less accumulated income from savings and investments • Marital status __________________________

  18. Economic Issues in Later Life Retirement income: Planning ahead • Social Security • Spousal benefits • Dual entitlement • Pensions • Work patterns • Vesting • Nonportability • Spousal benefits • Savings and investments ___________________________

More Related