In 1963, women spoke out and were able to initiate the forming of the law called the Equal Pay Act, an amendment to the already existing Fair Labor Standards Act. The act requires employers to pay all employees equally for equal work, regardless of their gender. However, this law has a very big weakness; it only applies when men and women are doing the exact same work, yet in the past, women have been denied many types of work and have had limited entree to managerial positions. Therefore, the act affects a very small number of women. In fact, Census Bureau figures show that women working full-time jobs still earn seventy-three cents for every dollar men earn, less than half of a penny per year increase since the fifty-eight cents to a dollar ratio of female to male wages of 1963 when the Equal Pay Act was implemented. Where are every woman’s twenty-seven cents? They are definitely not going towards supporting their children or their households.
Sixty-four percent of women claim that they make over half of their families’ income, and if these women are underpaid for their work, how can they support their families? Women’s work is the bridge out of poverty for many married couple working families and fair wages are even more crucial for single, working mothers whose pay is the only income. If women were paid justly, their work would not only bring their families out from the depths of poverty, but raise them to comfortable living standards in which their children would no longer fear going to school on the first day wearing hand-me-downs or out-of-style shoes, no longer have to worry about not having enough money to pay for college tuition, no longer be hungry, no longer have to come home to an empty house because their mothers are working later and longer than their male co-workers only to make the same amount of money as they do. Women can end this gender bias. Speak to your employers. File law suits against discrimination. Only if you act now can you prevent having fewer savings and smaller pensions than men later on.
The Homework on Should Women Work Outside Home
Recently, many women are engaged in various kinds of job, and they have been advancing in society. Moreover, it is quite ubiquitous among typical families that a mother works outside the home. In the article Should a Woman Work Outside the Home?, the author Mohammed Akade Osman Sudan argues that a womans rightful place in society is in the home. I disagree with the authors view that women should ...
More wives and more mothers are working for pay than ever before, and they are working more. Their earnings are essential to family support. Pay discrimination costs women a lot, but it robs husbands and families, too. Equal pay not only means higher wages for women, but higher wages for men in jobs usually or predominantly held by women sales, service, and clerical positions. It is time that women, and men too, demand gender equality in the workplace. Women cannot be denied their law-given rights..