I think this paper is one of the best cases of evidence against the myth of the gender pay gap.
The Confidence Gap, a piece in Salon, bought up the idea that confidence affects the wages we ask for, and how women are often less confident in their fields (and they have a greater burden of appearing to have confidence without too much, i.e. appearing bitchy .. oddly enough a bigger issue with female focus groups).
But there are other large factors. Women tend to take jobs they are more fulfilled in, even if they know they'll earn less. We see more female teachers and nurses and fewer female oil rig workers.
Even in really progressive societies, I still think there is a subconscious believe that men should be able to provide for the family. This is changing in some areas; the west coast and startup culture cities you'll see this more. But in general, it's the Office Space and Dilbert word: men are more likely to take unfulfilling office work to earn the cash. Why aren't there more women in tech? Maybe they see men miserable with their jobs, both in person and in pop culture.
This study goes to show the income gap may have more to do with personal choices than anything else.
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[ 1.8 ms ] story [ 9.7 ms ] threadThe Confidence Gap, a piece in Salon, bought up the idea that confidence affects the wages we ask for, and how women are often less confident in their fields (and they have a greater burden of appearing to have confidence without too much, i.e. appearing bitchy .. oddly enough a bigger issue with female focus groups).
But there are other large factors. Women tend to take jobs they are more fulfilled in, even if they know they'll earn less. We see more female teachers and nurses and fewer female oil rig workers.
Even in really progressive societies, I still think there is a subconscious believe that men should be able to provide for the family. This is changing in some areas; the west coast and startup culture cities you'll see this more. But in general, it's the Office Space and Dilbert word: men are more likely to take unfulfilling office work to earn the cash. Why aren't there more women in tech? Maybe they see men miserable with their jobs, both in person and in pop culture.
This study goes to show the income gap may have more to do with personal choices than anything else.