Cavey wrote:
I mean, I really don't think it can be denied that women are often paid less than men for the same job, as well as under represented generally?
It's illegal to pay less for the same job, and statistics back that up. There are *very* few cases where employers are actually breaking the law outright there, and obviously I agree those should be stamped upon. The 'earnings' gap, if you investigate properly, is generally because men work longer hours or work in better paid fields. For women that work as long or work in those same fields, they are not paid any less - it would be illegal. In jobs where negotiation is a factor, as I said, it's down to the ability of the individual to negotiate. You'll find women being paid more than men if they were better at negotiating, and men being paid more than other men for the same reason.
Representation is a much trickier question. Firstly it presumes that it is desirable or advantageous to have all sexes represented equally across all types of employment. Who says? And why? But again you don't see anybody arguing to get the proportion of Bin men and Bin Women to be equally 50/50, because that's not seen as a worthy ambition for women. It's fine for men, obviously, but we really need to get 50% of women in boardrooms for some reason.
I don't object to having women in high ranking positions. I work with a lot of women, my boss is female. I have no problem with it at all. But everything should be based on merit and not quota-filling imposed from on high, because that's just applying 'positive' discrimination which defeats the whole purpose. My boss was recently promoted and even she confessed to me that she thinks it was because HR are trying to quality for some 'equality' award for getting more women onto higher payscales.
Definitely tackle unconscious bias (we actually have training courses locally on how to ensure interviewers aren't doing that), and get to a position where you're satisfied people have
equality of opportunity. If everyone has the same opportunity to do what they want without being impeded, then the numbers come down to what people would rather do for which there is no wrong proportion. Because some political movement says women need to get into boardrooms, that doesn't actually mean anyone should feel compelled to do that. People should do exactly what they want and if that makes any industry not 50/50 then I don't see that as a problem.
The point of education which might need work is to ensure that children know that. They should know that men don't have to become mechanics or astronauts or that women don't have to be homemakers or beauty therapists. Those remain perfectly viable options, but choosing them should be in the knowledge that that's their personal preference and that all career paths are open to everyone in the 21st century.
I'm sure such an attitude makes me a pariah here, because it makes too much logical sense.