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Overview of Occupational Segregation in the U.S.

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Wages are lower in jobs that are held mainly by women (Stone 2003) ... non-traditional jobs for women ... Typically have higher pay than female-dominated jobs. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overview of Occupational Segregation in the U.S.


1
Overview of Occupational Segregation in the U.S.
  • Vicky Lovell, Ph.D.
  • Institute for Womens Policy Research
  • World Bank Workshop II for Gender Focal Points
  • April 7, 2005

2
  • Occupational segregation is a strong, persistent
    feature of U.S. labor markets.
  • Despite the end of legal barriers to professional
    education for women, in the 1960s, women and men
    continue to work in very different jobs.
  • There has been some decline in the extent of
    occupational segregation in the U.S. in recent
    decades

3
  • Table 1. Index of Dissimilarity
  • (0 complete integration)

Source Jerry A. Jacobs, Detours on the Road to
Equality (Contexts 2(1)32-41, Winter 2003).
4
Table 2. Examples of occupational segregation
Source U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Highlights of Womens Earnings in 2003 (USDOL
978, September 2004).
5
Why does it matter?
  • Wages are lower in jobs that are held mainly by
    women (Stone 2003).
  • Many female-dominated jobs are extremely
    low-wage.
  • Women are not able to reach their full potential
    if limited in their occupational choices.
  • Employers are not able to choose the most
    productive workers.

6
Table 3. Top 20 occupations for women
7
  • Concern about slow progress in closing the
    gender wage ratio

8
  • There is increasing concern about womens and
    families economic stability and
    self-sufficiency, with women having a growing
    responsibility for family income.
  • In some occupations, womens representation has
    actually decreased e.g., some computer-related
    occupations.
  • Employment growth is expected to be greatest in
    some very low-paying jobs requiring very low (or
    no) training or education.

9
Table 4. Employment growth 2002 2012
Source Daniel E. Hecker, Occupational
employment projections to 2012 (Monthly Labor
Review 27(2) 80-105, February 2004)..
10
Interest in non-traditional jobs for women
  • In the U.S., non-traditional means fewer than
    25 percent of workers in the occupation are
    women.
  • Typically have higher pay than female-dominated
    jobs.
  • For less-skilled workers, main jobs are in
    construction (carpenters, electricians,
    plumbers).
  • Training provided by community colleges or union
    apprenticeship programs.

11
Non-traditional occupations offer manybenefits
to women . . . .
  • Higher wages
  • Good benefits (health insurance, pensions)
  • Variety and mobility
  • Casual dress
  • Outdoor work
  • Job satisfaction
  • Opportunities to learn on the job
  • Career ladders
  • Enhanced quality of life
  • New skills that can be used in many jobs

12
. . . . along with some challenges
  • Hazardous workplaces
  • Discrimination and/or harassment
  • Sense of isolation if there are few other women
  • Families and friends may not be supportive
  • Transportation and child-care may be difficult to
    arrange
  • Weather, heat, cold, dust, dirt, noise
  • Physical requirements
  • Shift work
  • Seasonal layoffs
  • May need to learn unfamiliar skills

Source Wider Opportunities for Women 2004.
13
Non-traditional occupations offer higher wages
and lower education/training costs
  • Average cost of a 4-year college degree 74,000
  • Average cost of a 4-year apprenticeship program
    2,000
  • In the first 20 years, workers will earn
  • College graduates 630,000
  • Union workers in building trades 844,000

Source Oregon Tradeswomen n.d.
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