WSJ
 
 Updated April 26, 2012, 10:19 a.m. ET 
Kay Hymowitz: Why Women Make Less Than Men 
In studies from the U.S. to Sweden, pay  discrimination can't explain the 
disparity. Women earn less because they work  fewer hours.

 
 
 
 
By _KAY  HYMOWITZ_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=KAY+HYMOWITZ&bylinesearch=true)
  
First, the Atlantic magazine announced "the end of men." Then a Time cover  
story in March proclaimed that women are becoming "the richer sex." Now a 
Pew  Research Center report tells us that young women have become more likely 
than  young men to say that a high-paying career is very important to them. 
Are we  really in the midst of what Pew calls a "gender reversal?" 
One stubborn fact of the labor market argues against the idea. That is the  
gender-hours gap, close cousin of the gender-wage gap. Most people have 
heard  that full-time working American women earn only 77 cents for every 
dollar earned  by men. Yet these numbers don't take into account the actual 
number of hours  worked. And it turns out that women work fewer hours than men. 
 
The Labor Department defines full-time as 35 hours a week or more, and the  
"or more" is far more likely to refer to male workers than to female ones.  
According to the department, almost 55% of workers logging more than 35 
hours a  week are men. In 2007, 25% of men working full-time jobs had workweeks 
of 41 or  more hours, compared with 14% of female full-time workers. In 
other words, the  famous gender-wage gap is to a considerable degree a 
gender-hours gap.  
The main reason that women spend less time at work than men—and that women  
are unlikely to be the richer sex—is obvious: children. Today, childless  
20-something women do earn more than their male peers. But most are likely to 
 cut back their hours after they have kids, giving men the hours, and 
income,  advantage.  
One study by the American Association for University Women looked at women  
who graduated from college in 1992-93 and found that 23% of those who had 
become  mothers were out of the workforce in 2003; another 17% were working 
part-time.  Fewer than 2% of fathers fell into those categories. Another 
study, of M.B.A.  graduates from Chicago's Booth School, discovered that only 
half of women with  children were working full-time 10 years after graduation, 
compared with 95% of  men.  
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
Women, in fact, make up two-thirds of America's  part-time workforce. A 
just-released report from the New York Federal Reserve  has even found that 
"opting-out" by midcareer college-educated wives, especially  those with 
wealthy husbands, has been increasing over the past 20 years. 





Activists tend to offer two solutions for this state of affairs. First is  
that fathers should take equal responsibility for child care. After all, 
while  men have tripled the number of hours they're in charge of the kids since 
1970,  women still put in more hours on the domestic front. But even if we 
could put a  magic potion in the nation's water supply and turn 50% of men 
into Mr. Mom, that  still leaves the growing number of women with no father 
in the house. Over 40%  of American children are now born to unmarried women. 
A significant  number—though not a majority—are living with their child's 
father at birth. But  in the next few years when those couples break up, 
which is what studies show  they tend to do, guess who will be left minding the 
kids?  
Which brings us to the second proposed solution for the hours gap: generous 
 family-leave and child-care policies. Sweden and Iceland are frequently 
held up  as models in this regard, and they do have some of the most extensive 
paternity  and maternity leave and publicly funded child care in the world. 
 
Yet even they also have a persistent hours and wage gap. In both countries, 
 mothers still take more time off than fathers after the baby arrives. When 
they  do go back to work, they're on the job for fewer hours. Iceland's 
income gap is  a yawning 38%—that is, the average women earns only 62 cents to 
a man's dollar.  Even Sweden's 15% gap—though lower than our 23% one—is far 
from full parity. 
All over the developed world women make up the large majority of the  
part-time workforce, and surveys suggest they want it that way. According to 
the  
Netherlands Institute for Social Research, in 2008 only 4% of the 70% of 
Dutch  women who worked part-time wished they had a full-time job. A British 
Household  Panel Survey interviewing 3,800 couples discovered that among 
British women, the  happiest were those working part-time.  
A 2007 Pew Research survey came up with similar results for American women: 
 Among working mothers with minor children, 60% said they would prefer to 
work  part-time, while only 21% wanted to be in the office full-time (and 19% 
said  they'd like to give up their job altogether). How about working 
fathers? Only  12% would choose part-time and 70% wanted to be full-time. 
Some counter that the hours gap would shrink if employers offered more  
family-friendly policies, such as flexible hours and easier on-off ramps for  
moving in and out of the workforce. We don't know if there is a way to design 
 workplaces so that women would work more or men would work less or both. 
What we  do know is that no one, anywhere, has yet figured out how to do it. 
Which means  that for the foreseeable future, at least when it comes to 
income, women will  remain the second sex. 
Ms. Hymowitz is a fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the author, most  
recently, of "Manning Up: How the Rise of Women Has Turned Men Into Boys," 
just  published in paperback by Basic Books.  
A version of this article appeared April 26, 2012, on  page A15 in some 
U.S. editions of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline:  Why Women Make 
Less Than Men.

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