Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Why American Husbands Listen to their wives ( Information Article )

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Click here: http://bit.ly/ggvFI

Why American Husbands Listen to their wives 

Women

set to outnumber men at work in America

One person's adversity is often another's opportunity. That's certainly proving

to be the case in recession-hit North America. A spurt in firing of men and

hiring of women has resulted in women now outnumbering men in the Canadian

workforce, accounting for 50.9% of the country's 14 million salaried workers.

In the US, too, women now hold 49.8% of that country's 132 million jobs and are

projected to cross the 50% mark by the first quarter of 2010 when the US will -

according to President Barack Obama - come out of recession.

American daily USA Today has described this as a historic reversal caused by

long-term changes in women's roles and job losses for men during recession.

''Women are gaining the majority of jobs in the few sectors of the economy that

are growing,'' the newspaper said. As a matter of fact, at the current pace,

women could even outnumber male workers in the US by November this year.

Across the border in Canada, there are 160,000 more women in jobs than men,

according to The Toronto Star.

Nobody in Canada really noticed when in 2007 women first outnumbered men in the

workforce for three months from February to April. But this year, women's

dominance in paid employment (50.9%) clearly marks a turning point. This is the

first time it has lasted this long and the differences have been significantly

high.

In the US, gender transformation is particularly visible in local governments'

14.6 million work force. Cities, schools, water authorities and other local

jurisdictions have cut out 86,000 men from payrolls during the recession while

adding 167,000 women.

The postal service is cutting tens of thousands of unionised, blue collar jobs

dominated by men while new hires are expanding in teaching and other fields

dominated by college educated women.

But analysts say these figures could be red herrings and that the historic

milestones hold little promise for women in their longstanding battle for

economic equality.

The Toronto Star said women still make up about 70% of part-time workers and

60% of minimum wage earners in Canada.

" Nearly 40% are in precarious jobs that are poorly paid with little or no

benefits, " it said. And the average full-time female worker earns just

71.4 cents for every dollar earned by a man.

In US, the boost has come due to massive job cuts in male-dominated professions

such as construction and manufacturing. Through June, men lost 74% of the 6.4

million jobs erased since the recession began. Men have lost over 3 million

jobs in construction and manufacturing alone.

Labour economist Heidi Hartmann says the change reflects the growing importance

of women as wage earners, but it doesn't show full equality. " On average,

women work fewer hours than men, hold more part-time jobs and earn 77% of what

men make, " she said. Men also still dominate higher-paying executive

ranks.

<PREV

ARTICLE :     :NEXT

ARTICLE>

More Entertainment Stories ( Don't Miss )...

Beautiful Horses ( Amazing Pics )

Convertible Car ( Beautiful Designs )

sword swallow ( Crazy Pics )

Lang Photo Gallery

You are receiving this message because you have opted in to the one of Your Fevourite Group. To unsubscribe, please follow this link: mygroups

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...