Archive for October, 2003

I still owe people drawings

Posted by Ampersand | October 24th, 2003

Amazingly - and pathetically - I still owe people drawings from the blogathon. I have not forgotten, and I will be doing those. Thanks to everyone for their patience.

This week is entirely taken up by trying to put all of my possessions into boxes and moving them to the new house (speaking of which, there won’t be many new blog entries this week), and also by work I get paid for. After that, I need to put together a workspace for myself in the new house. I hope to get to the drawing board by November first.

How to tell if you’re a geek

Posted by Ampersand | October 23rd, 2003

It all comes down to one question:

In your opinion, which is the best Star Trek show?

Your answer to that determines if you’re a geek or not. So think about it, get your answer in mind, and to see how you scored click below.
Read the rest of this entry »

Why does the Republican party oppose banning late-term abortions?

Posted by Ampersand | October 22nd, 2003

Sebastian Holsclaw’s new blog has a couple of entries on abortion; one addressing his own pro-life side in refreshingly reasonable terms, and one addressing the pro-choice side. The comments feature some passionate, but polite, debate. (The poster “Fredo” is doing an admirable job holding up the pro-choice side of the debate.)

Sebastian’s message to pro-choicers comes in two parts. First, Sebastian argues that the focus of the abortion debate should be about “the personhood of the fetus.” Fredo, in Sebastian’s comments, and Mithras at Fables of the Reconstruction do a good job responding to this point.

Second, Sebastian argues that the “health” exceptions to late-term abortion bans are abused.

Abortion is unrestricted until the very second of actual birth: the life or health exceptions are being abused. It is commonly understood by a vast majority of people that abortions should be allowed when they threaten the life of the mother. This falls under the concept that you are allowed to kill the person who puts your life in extreme danger.

NARAL puts the number of third trimester abortions at about 0.4% of all abortions. I suspect that NARAL is downplaying the statistics, but if you trust them that puts the number of third trimester abortions at about 6,000 per year. Even many liberal states theoretically restrict third trimester abortions except when a continued pregnancy threatens the ‘life or health’ of the mother. The health part of the clause has been so broadly interpreted as to allow ANY mental distress of ANY intensity to be a ‘threat to the health’ of the mother. As a result, despite intensive searching, I have not found a single case in the history of legal US abortions where the mother was not able to qualify under such a clause. That is not one case in about 6,000 abortions per year for 30 years. In fact I don’t even know of a method of a legal method where such decisions might be reviewed. The way these exceptions are implemented make a mockery even of Roe v. Wade. The practical effect of this is that abortion is completely legal all the way up to the very second of birth.

I suspect you know that the US public wouldn’t be thrilled about that, which is why you cling to the fiction of that abortions can be restricted in the third trimester, while in practice you make it impossible for any such restrictions to come into force.

I’m going to answer Sebastian in three parts. First, I’ll show why his argument is based on false premises, and doesn’t hold up. Second, I’ll explain the real-world politics of late-term abortion bans - and why “pro-life” legislators have actually been fighting against late-term abortion bans. Third, I’ll discuss the health exemption to abortion bans.

1. What’s wrong with Sebastian’s logic - bad premise in, bad conclusion out.

Sebastian seems to believe that there is currently a national ban in place on third-trimester abortions, with exceptions to spare the life or health of the mother. This is utterly untrue; there is no such national ban in place.

But what about state-level bans? Many states have some sort of ban on late-term abortions or on the fictional concept known as “partial-birth” abortions. However, nearly all of these bans were effectively rendered unconstitutional by the Supreme Court’s decision in Stenberg v. Carhart. Women needing late-term abortions in the few remaining states whose bans aren’t unconstitutional probably don’t sue to get abortions; it would be much simpler to simply obtain their abortion in another state, one without a ban.

So Sebastian?s argument - which is based on the premise that the US currently bans late-term abortions, and the health exemption to this ban is abused - is totally mistaken. There is no national ban. The few constitutional state-level bans are probably avoided by visiting a different state, not by abusing the health exemption.

2. Why Republicans oppose banning late-term abortions.

So why isn’t there a national ban on late-term abortions?

Because the Republicans don’t want one.

Now, I know you’re thinking I’m nuts. After all, didn’t the Republican-dominated congress just pass a ban on “partial birth” abortions, which the Republican president is expected to sign?

Yes, indeed. But - despite their rhetoric to the contrary - the Republicans in congress know that their ban will almost certainly be found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. And the funny thing is, the Republicans know perfectly well how to write a constitutional ban on late-term abortions - Sandra Day O’Connor, in her Carhart concurrence, explained very specifically what sort of ban would be constitutional.

A ban on partial-birth abortion that only proscribed the D&X method of abortion and that included an exception to preserve the life and health of the mother would be constitutional in my view.

O’Connor is the swing vote on this issue on the Court, so her opinion is effectively law. You want to write a constitutional ban on late-term D&X abortions? Sandy’s told you exactly how to do it.

And yet, the Republicans write a ban that does not limit itself to one procedure, and does not contain any health exception. They’ve written a ban, in other words, that’s specifically designed to be rejected by the Supreme Court. What’s up with that?

Here’s another piece of the puzzle. The Republicans in congress don’t want a real ban - but the Democrats do. The Democrats have proposed constitutional bans on late-term D&X abortions again and again, and have been voted down by Republicans every time. It doesn’t matter how the health ban is worded - the Republicans even rejected Dick Durbin’s bill, which would “ban all abortions after a fetus is viable unless two physicians certify that the abortion is necessary to protect the life of the pregnant woman or that she was at risk of grievous injury to her physical health.”

So what’s going on here?

What’s going on is, “partial-birth” abortion is a great issue for Republicans, and they don’t want it to go away. It lets Republican Congresscritters show their pro-life base that they’re fighting the good fight and trying to save babies. It lets them portray Democrats who favor banning late-term abortions, but who want a health exemption, as extremist baby-killers. And by concentrating their fire on “partial-birth” abortions, the Republicans get to avoid dealing with the controversial and electorially dangerous issue of first-trimester abortions.

You see, as long as the fight against “partial birth” abortion consumes pro-life attention, Republican politicians get a pass from proposing any serious legislation attacking first-trimester abortion rights in the states. And that’s very important to the GOP, because a serious fight against first-trimester abortions would be terrible for the Republicans; it would not only galvanize Democrats, it would create a serious split in the Republican party between pro-life and pro-choice Republicans.

The last thing the Republicans want is a multi-year legislative fight over first-trimester abortions. And as long as they can keep the “partial birth” abortion debate alive, they can avoid that fight - and as an added bonus, they get to look like heroes to pro-life voters.

That’s why the Republicans have never supported a constitutional late-term D&X ban - and that’s why the Democrats keep on proposing such bans, and would love to get one passed.

3. The truth about the health exemption in abortion bans.

Sebastian’s concerns about abuse of the health ban are nonsense; they’re the usual lies fed to gullible pro-lifers by cynical Republicans. For instance, Sebastian complains that the “health part of the clause has been so broadly interpreted as to allow ANY mental distress of ANY intensity to be a ‘threat to the health’ of the mother.” But if Sebastian had read the actual text of Democratic proposals like Dick Durbin’s, he would know that Republicans reject all health exemptions, no matter how tightly worded - even ones that specifically restrict the exemption to only physical health problems.

The truth is, there is no ban on “partial birth” abortions in the United States, and hence no health exemption to be abused. But if Republicans were sincere in their concerns, then the legitimate and responsible solution is to pass a constitutional ban on late-term D&X abortions, and then to pass further legislation to close inappropriate loopholes in the health exemption when (and if) they show up.

That?s the responsible way to deal with the loophole problem (if it even exists - I’ve seen no persuasive evidence that it does).

That’s what the Republican-controlled legislature and executive would do if they really wanted to ban late-term D&X abortions.

But of course, that’s not what they want. They want to keep the partial-birth issue alive forever; actually banning anything would be counter-productive.

* * *

A final note: it may be fair to oppose particular, badly worded health exemptions; but it is irresponsible and immoral to oppose all health exemptions, regardless of the wording.

Sebastian, face reality - not every health exemption claimed is bogus. In the real world, pregnancies sometimes go wrong and are dangerous. Please address this question directly: Are you seriously prepared to deny women with genuine health needs the medical help they need to avoid crippling pain, internal damage, and infertility? Because that’s what the legislation you favor would do to at least some women, if it were constitutional (which, fortunately, it probably is not).

Pro-lifers will never escape their reputation as woman-hating fanatics as long as they?d rather see a woman crippled and infertile than permit her to get the medical help she needs for health reasons. And that’s as it should be - opposing the health exemption for women who need it, on the grounds of speculative abuses, is barbaric.

A few things I’ve read today

Posted by Ampersand | October 21st, 2003
  • A victory for the pro-lifers today: The Senate Approves Ban on Abortion Procedure. Enjoy your victory while it lasts, is my advice to the right. Once I was very worried about this, but that was when I was assuming that O’Conner was going to retire from the Supreme Court during Bush’s first term. With O’Conner staying on the Court, however, it’s very likely that the Court is going to find this ban unconstitutional.

  • Proof that not all conservatives are anti-gay: There’s a good Andrew Sullivan essay in the Wall Street Journal, criticizing other conservatives for their anti-gay attitudes.
    So what is it? What exactly is the post-Lawrence conservative social policy toward homosexuals? Amazingly, the current answer is entirely a negative one. The majority of social conservatives oppose gay marriage; they oppose gay citizens serving their country in the military; they oppose gay citizens raising children; they oppose protecting gay citizens from workplace discrimination; they oppose including gays in hate-crime legislation, while including every other victimized group; they oppose civil unions; they oppose domestic partnerships; they oppose . . . well, they oppose, for the most part, every single practical measure that brings gay citizens into the mainstream of American life.

    This is simply bizarre. Can you think of any other legal, noncriminal minority in society toward which social conservatives have nothing but a negative social policy? What other group in society do conservatives believe should be kept outside integrating social institutions? On what other issue do conservatives favor separatism over integration? We know, in short, what conservatives are against in this matter. But what exactly are they for?

  • But then again… for a laugh, check out this response to Sullivan by David Frum, also in the WSJ. Frum argues that conservatives have no choice but to oppose gay marriage laws. Why? Because if gays can marry, the goverment will be forced to set up halfway-marriage laws, which heterosexuals will want access to, which will reduce heterosexual marraige. Why will halfway-marriage laws be necessary? Because conservatives will oppose full gay-marriage laws.

    In other words - if we cut out the fuzzy middle of this logic chain, and look only at the start and end - conservatives have no choice but to oppose gay marriage laws because conservatives will oppose gay marriage laws. Oy.

  • A few days ago, I mentioned the Terri Schiavo case. Today, Jeb Bush has signed a new law which will cause Schiavo to be kept alive via a tube feeder.
  • Jasperboi, a non-op (I think - it’s not really my business, of course) FtM transsexual (I think) feminist - muses on the kinds of men that different parts of our society will allow/expect him to be, and also on the difficulties men can have on finding a place in feminism. Interesting stuff.
  • From back in June, a very good post on Procrastination, arguing that arranged marriages have been overrated.
  • Two interesting Times articles on childbearing and poverty. First, a case of a woman charged with child endangerment after her two children were murdered while she was at her job. She wasn’t able to find a baby-sitter, and she couldn’t risk being fired, so she left her two kids, ages 8 and 2, at home. While she was out, someone deliberately set her apartment on fire, killing the children. Now she’s been charged with child endangerment.

    This underscores the desparate need for universal, free child-care. There’s no reason anyone should be faced with this sort of “leave your kids alone or lose your job and watch the kids starve” choice. To then charge the woman with a crime is disgusting.

    Second, a new study finds that chlidren’s behavior improves as their family’s income goes up.

  • Over on Body and Soul, why I’m probably voting for Kucinich in the primary.
  • A really interesting essay, Free Mickey!, on an 1970s satire of Mickey Mouse that Disney attempted to sue into oblivionland.

The non-fat privilege checklist

Posted by Ampersand | October 20th, 2003

Speaking of size discrimination, Fatshadow has an excellent, post about size discrimination - listing the unstated (and often unnoticed) advantages that average-sized folks get for being average-sized.

This is a format that’s been used a lot. It began with the essay “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” by Peggy McIntosh, which used (among other things) a list format to try and make White privilege “visible.” Inspired by McIntosh, people have written similar lists about striaght privilege, about non-trans privilege, and about male privilege. (That last one was compiled by yours truly several years ago, and has since been used in many college classrooms.) Update: And here’s yet another one, focusing on able-bodied privileges.

I haven’t seen one about size privilege before, though - and it’s long overdue. So thanks, Tish. Here’s a sampling…

Everyday as an average sized person …

I can be sure that people aren’t embarrassed to be seen with me because of the size of my body.

If I pick up a magazine or watch T.V. I will see bodies that look like mine that aren’t being lampooned, desexualized, or used to signify laziness, ignorance, or lack of self-control.

I do not have to be afraid that when I talk to my friends or family they will mention the size of my body in a critical manner, or suggest unsolicited diet products and exercise programs.

I will not be accused of being emotionally troubled or in psychological denial because of the size of my body.

I can be sure that when I go to a class, or movie, or restaurant that I will find a place to sit in which I am relatively comfortable.

I will never have to sit quietly and listen while other people talk about the ways in which they avoid being my size.

That’s just a few of the items Tish listed - be sure to read the whole thing.

Discrimination against fat people

Posted by Ampersand | October 20th, 2003

A pretty interesting article in the Star Tribune about workplace discrimination against fat people.

Meanwhile, in today’s competitive job market, bias against overweight people is commonplace, obesity-rights advocates say. The overweight are slighted in the areas of hiring, promotion, compensation and layoffs, according to Mark Roehling, an assistant professor at Michigan State University, who reviewed 49 studies on the subject.

Roehling has interviewed dozens of heavy people about their job-hunting experiences. One woman told him that she sat at a job interview and watched in horror as her interviewer wrote in big letters across the top of her résumé: “TOO FAT.”

Discrimination is especially acute in workplaces where a premium is placed on personal appearance, such as executive-level positions, sales, public relations and other areas where client contact is key, said Mary Story, a University of Minnesota professor who studies obesity.

In a 1990 study of several hundred people by University of Vermont professor Esther Rothblum, the heaviest were most likely to report they’d been denied benefits including health insurance because of their size. Many said they had been fired or threatened with dismissal for weight reasons.

Women suffer the greatest unfairness, she said. “They don’t have to weigh very much for employment discrimination to kick in.”

Rothblum once showed a set of identical résumés to a group of students. Half the résumés stated that the fictitious female job seeker was 120 pounds. The other half put her weight at 180 pounds. She asked the students to rate the woman’s professional competence and suggest her appropriate salary range.

The 180-pound woman scored dramatically lower. “The amazing thing about that experiment,” Rothblum said, “is that, actually, 180 pounds is not that heavy. Imagine what larger people experience. I think fat people underestimate how much of their daily encounters are different because of their weight.”

The article also attempts to justify the discrimination by pointing to a RAND study which found that obese people spend more on health care than smokers or chronic drinkers, leading to higher health care costs of hiring obese workers. From what I can tell, the Rand study in question is pretty flawed.

  • The study doesn’t account for ways in which obesity might be an effect of, rather than a cause of, chronic health conditions. Many health conditions can lead to large weight gains, either directly, as a side effect of medication, or through decreased exercise. It’s incorrect to count these instances as cases in which obesity causes disease, but that’s what the RAND study does.

  • Due to massive discrimination against fat people, it wouldn’t surprise me if obese people were more likely to seek treatment for depression. But if so, the cause may be prejudice against fat people, and not fatness itself.
  • Obese people are extremely likely to see doctors and take medications as part of weight-loss plans. This shouldn’t be counted as equivalent to the way smokers are more likely to need cancer treatments - but that’s what the RAND study does.

Protest Advertising

Posted by the unknown author | October 18th, 2003

While browsing around at Wired Magazine I came across this article about MAdGE, a New Zealand group opposed to genetic engineering, and their latest ad campaign revolving around billboards with this picture of a woman with four breasts hooked up to a milking machine.

Alannah Currie, the group’s founder, said she designed the ads to provoke an ethical debate.

[...]

The public response has been mixed. MAdGE has gotten some complaints from people who find the billboards offensive.

“It is definitely degrading to women, but more degrading to women is putting human genes in milk,” Currie said. “It’s punk art.”

The biotech industry is predictably unhappy about the billboards.

“MAdGE’s latest grasp for public attention denigrates women and illustrates what little grasp this group has of reality,” said William Rolleston, chairman of the Life Sciences Network, a biotech industry organization for New Zealand and Australia, in a statement.

The article and ad both caught my eye, and I was curious as to what Alas readers would think of it. Is the image degrading to women? Is there such a thing as “punk art” that can be degrading in order to promote a cause that the advertiser believes is just? This ad strikes me as being of a different character than the infamous PETA supermodel ads, but I haven’t entirely made my mind up about it and will have to think about it a bit more.

I don’t want this to turn into a debate about genetic engineering, but I’d like to hear what people think of this ad.

Some stuff Ampersand has recently read

Posted by Ampersand | October 16th, 2003

There’s, like, ten thousand things I’ve missed posting links to lately, while I’ve been busy painting and working and suchlike. I won’t even attempt to catch up. But here’s a few of the things that are open in my browser right now:

  • Over at Cut on the Bias, I’ve been participating in a discussion of art and comics with the (mostly right-wing) group that hangs out there. Right-wing cartoonist Chris Muir, of Day by Day, has also been contributing. (I like Chris’ cartoons better than he likes mine, alas).

    (If anyone from Alas comments over there, by the way, please be polite!)

  • Susanna linked to this essay about Dave Sim’s misogyny, which I thought was pretty good.
  • The Washington Post reports on a study which found that the more people watch FoxNews, the less they’re able to accurately answer factual questions about the war in Iraq.
  • You may think you’re geeky, but compared to some people, you’re not a geek at all. Check out this apartment for sale on Ebay.
  • Lots of people have linked to this Calpundit post on the Texas Republican party, and rightly so. The Republican party is being taken over by people who are, frankly, scarey.
  • Of all the Rush-mocking articles I’ve read lately, this one - If Bill Clinton were an addict, this is how Rush might spin it - is the most on-target.
  • Arnold Kling’s much-linked tech-central column criticizing Paul Krugman is fairly on-target, I think. Although Krugman actually uses a lot more “type C” arguments than Kling credits him for. Via Brad DeLong.
  • If you haven’t been reading the comments to PDP’s post “Ms. Fat-so,” you should - there’s been some really good discussion there. Fatshadow also added a typically well-written comment on her own blog.
  • The best interview with candidates I’ve seen in ages: a local paper uses Philip K. Dick’s Voight-Kampff Test to find out if the candidates are humans or replicants. Via Charles Murtaugh.
  • Have you heard of Terri Schiavo? I hadn’t, until yesterday. She’s a woman in a coma (or maybe not, according to some folks) who was taken off her feeding tube yesterday. It’s a fascinating issue, and one that’s apparently very big in some right-wing circles. Amy Welborn has some informative links. Or for a wider range of views, check google news. Via Eve Tushnet.
  • “Resolved: It is a complete fabrication that the Bush administration argued in the runup to the war that there was an imminent thread from Iraq.” This question is being debated semi-formally by Jonathan Schwarz and Sebastian Holsclaw on Daniel Drezner’s blog; if you enjoy debate, check it out.
  • Will Baude of Crescat Sententia points to an good Dahlia Lithwick article taking apart Greg Easterbrook’s “no doesn’t mean no” argument. There’s much more discussion of this going on - scroll around on Crescat Sententia to find more links.
  • Also at Crescat Sententia, Amy Lamboley responds to part of my wage gap series. I don’t really disagree with Amy; obviously (and thanks mainly to feminism), things have improved substantially since Amy’s mother entered the workforce. If Amy’s arguing that discrimination is no longer a significant factor at all, I’d disagree with her, but I’m not sure that is what she’s arguing.
  • Eve Tushnet has been arguing against same-sex marriage. I disagree with Eve, but her blog is a good place to go if you want to see the most intelligent, coherent arguments agailable against SSM - just click here and then scroll upwards. I hope to find time to respond to some of Eve’s points in the next week.

    Oh, and hey: Congrats to Eve on her new post as editor of the Marriage Deabte blog.

Whoops - time for me to run to work. I haven’t spell-checked this post; hopefully none of my typos will be too humiliating.

Light poppy-showers for a while

Posted by PinkDreamPoppies | October 14th, 2003

I meant to put up a new post earlier today but I wasn’t able to finish writing it because something came up; namely, my dad had to have emergency surgery for a perforated colon. The operation was successful and it looks as though he’ll recover nicely, but between hospital visits and my new job it might be a while before you see that post or any other.

I don’t know, though, we’ll just have to see.

So that this won’t have been an entirely depressing post, I ask you to please contemplate the limitless possibilities of the eighteen-cent piece, as well as some bizarre little serfs in the animal kingdom.

Note: this post was posted by PinkDreamPoppies, a guest-blogger. This post was not posted by bean or Ampersand.

“Ms. Fat-so”

Posted by PinkDreamPoppies | October 12th, 2003
A typical day: When I walk out of my home, a flyer stapled to the telephone pole I pass on the way to my car proclaims, “Lose 30 pounds in 30 days … Ask me how!” On the way to work, I pass six skinny joggers, 12 Port Authority bus-boards with skinny, beautiful women on them, and four billboards related to health and beauty featuring tiny women.

Throughout the day, I receive 36 spam e-mails suggesting I should lose weight. Every time I log into my e-mail, I am treated to a large banner ad telling me I can “look better naked” through a certain weight-loss plan (an ad I see a total of 28 times during my workday).

Four times throughout the day, I pass the hallway vending machine, where the healthiest treat is a bag of pretzels, ridiculous with sodium.

By the time I am ready for bed, I have been reminded in 19 different ways and around 130 times that I am fat; that fat people are unattractive and undesirable; that fat people should be made fun of and feel ashamed of ourselves; and that we need to lose weight to be accepted, successful, beautiful.

Worth a look. (Brought to you by the Colorado Springs Independent by way of the Pittsburgh City Paper.)

Seven ways to have fun this weekend

Posted by the unknown author | October 11th, 2003

1. Drop by Lost in Translation, a site that specializes in making fun of translating software by turning it against itself. The site uses some sort of technological thing beyond my ability to comprehend to translate a phrase so many times that it makes even less sense than Engrish.

For example, something like this:

The dark figure streaming with fire raced towards them. The orcs yelled and poured over the stone gangways. Then Boromir raised his horn and blew. Loud the challenge rang and bellowed, like the shout of many throats under the cavernous roof. For a moment the orcs quailed and the fiery shadow halted. Then the echos died as suddenly as a flame blown out by a dark wind, and the enemy advanced again.

Becomes this nugget of clarity:

Of nondark the sketch in these accessories and ecceduto of the orders to compete he, who it left it to the work? In the point of the product of the rock, the one that extends, followed orcs the external part. And Boromir, alongside advanced of this and jumped angle, interior in her is increased. In winch the end to look like much throat to give to the form and its noises of the shout that are considering a challenge, shout constantly repaired to the fact they with dachs of the most inferior piece of the term of the repair perforateing that one which of the sieve of the shout are. Orcs, comes in him the extreme color, that arrests dubbing. As much how much the this chronometers are he who without the recognition comes the one from stampini of timeth of two and and was an enemy and a fire here, where the extension of the wind and the echo leave ignition.

2. For those of you who remember Transformers, one of the better-written animated television series to come from this side of the Pacific, or for those of you who just want to see something a bit different, check out amateur-made but professional-looking movie clip of a new Volkswagon Beetle transforming into a giant robot.

3. Buy a CD (or download some MP3s if you’re a scurvy mate), or, alternatively, just stare at your empty (or in Amp’s case dearly departed) wallet and wish that you could buy a CD. This weekend I’ll be listening to M83’s Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts, Dntel’s Life Is Full of Possibilities, My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless, and Jóhann Jóhannsson’s Englabörn. What can I say? I’m in the mood for static and electronics, I guess.

4. See if you can come up with six ways in which this picture doesn’t look like a modern Gap or Abercrombie ad. And, yes, the fact that she’s clothed in the first place counts as a difference. (Bonus! If you want to prove to yourself that you’re more culturally literate than I, see if you can recognize the woman in the photograph without being told who she is.)

5. Read a study about the forces required to drag sheep across various surfaces, the (scientifically validated) uniquely simple personalities of politicians, the composition of belly-button lint, and how to make frogs and sumo wrestlers hover, courtesy of the Ig® Nobel Prizes. (I think my favourite story from there is the one about the village of the dead in India.)

6. Learn about and experience some truly wonderful optical illusions at Sandlot Science. Be warned, though, that the site is pretty Java-intensive so it might be problematic for persons with abnormal browsers (i.e., not Netscape or Internet Explorer) or persons with slower connections. I used to have a really great optical illusion page in my bookmarks, but unfortunately it’s slipped away into that great chasm that inevitably develops between a new computer and an old one.

7. Have some fun with Google and Ogden’s Basic English: go to a word list for Basic English; pick a few words at random; run a Google search for those words using the “I’m Feeling Lucky” button; see what sort of interesting things you can find out about. For instance, a search for “industry goat development” takes me to this abstract (in PDF form) from the International Goat Association (who knew there was such an association?) about the “Role and Strategy of Goat Rearing Industry in Poverty Alleviation and Development.”

I promise to post something a bit more serious on Monday. Until then, have fun!

Guest Blogging with PinkDreamPoppies

Posted by PinkDreamPoppies | October 10th, 2003

As he’s mentioned, Ampersand is going to be pretty busy with his new house (ah, the joys of paint and wallpaper) so he’s asked me, PinkDreamPoppies, to do a bit of guest blogging here at Alas, a Blog for awhile.

I’ll be starting a new job next Wednesday so I may have to cut out for a bit in the latter half of next week, but other than that I’ll be doing my best to write some quality posts.

Sorry in advance for any technical problems in my posts. I’ve not used MovableType before so accidents are liable to happen.

Some Evidence of Discrimination (wage gap series, part 9)

Posted by Ampersand | October 10th, 2003

(This is one of a series of posts on the wage gap.)

In this post, I’ll address a very simple question: what evidence is there that economic discrimination against women currently exists in the USA? Reading the works of conservatives like Christina Hoff Sommers, one gets the impression that economic discrimination against women might not exist at all, nowadays. Unfortunately, that’s not true.

This post won’t even come close to describing the hundreds of academic papers and news reports which have found evidence of discrimination against women. Instead, I’ll be looking at just a few examples that clearly demonstrate that economic discrimination against women, contrary to the claims of the anti-feminists, is a real problem.

Audits

What happens if two otherwise identical people, one male and one female, apply for the same job? This is one of the clearest ways of showing discrimination. If discrimination never happens, then otherwise identical men and women would get identical results in the job market.

Of course, in the real world, no two people are ever identical. But researchers can fake it. For instance, economist David Neumark[1] conducted an “audit study.” “The purpose of an audit study is to provide much more direct evidence on discrimination than is provided by other empirical methods.” Male and female job applicants, chosen for similar characteristics, and trained to act in similar ways, applied in pairs for waiter positions in restaurants in Philadelphia. The applicants used fictional resumes that had been designed to show equal qualifications for a waiter position.

The results? 85% of the job offers from high-price restaurants (where wages are correspondingly high) were made to male job applicants. In contrast, 80% of the job offers from low-price, low-wage restaurants were made to women. This is clear evidence of sex discrimination in employment - evidence which might explain how it is that waitresses in the United States are paid only 75% of what waiters make.

Job Applicants Without Sex

Another interesting question is, what would happen if employers hired people without knowing their sex? If the anti-feminists are correct and sex discrimination doesn’t exist, then this would make no difference - employers would hire the same people whether or not they knew the sex of job applicants.

Of course, since employers quite reasonably want to interview people before hiring them, it generally never happens that people are hired without the employer knowing their sex. An interesting exception to this rule is major symphony orchestras. Most major symphony orchestras now practice “blind auditions,” in which musicians audition for a spot in the orchestra from behind a screen. Symphony directors choose which candidates to hire without knowing the sex of the person auditioning.

The economists Claudia Goldin and Cecilia Rouse, in a paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research,[2] asked an interesting question: do female musicians have a better chance of being hired when the judges don’t know their sex? Using data from actual audition records, they found that blind auditioning “increases by 50%” a woman’s odds of getting past preliminary auditions, and by several times increases the chance that a woman will win the final round of auditions. As much as 55% of the increase in women in symphony orchestras since the 1970s is due to the use of blind auditions.

Pay Differences Among the Highly Paid

Anti-feminists often complain that feminists don’t account for important economic factors - such as “occupation, age, experience, education, and time in the work force”[3] - when comparing male and female pay. Curiously, however, the anti-feminists themselves ignore many studies that account for all these factors and more, and still find a wage gap. Moreover, they often include economically irrelevant factors - such as comparing only the wages of very young women and men, as if discrimination among people ages 33 and up isn’t something we should be concerned with. (To read more about this, click here.)

One of the best studies of the sort the anti-feminists urge, considering as many economically relevant factors as possible, was done by the economists Robert Wood, Mary Corcoran and Paul Courant.[4] By looking at a very specific and detailed sample of workers - graduates of the Michigan Law School - they were able to examine the wage gap while matching men and women for many other possible explanatory factors - not only “occupation, age, experience, education, and time in the workforce,” but also childcare, average hours worked, grades while in college, and other factors.

The result? Even after accounting for all that, women still are paid only 81.5% of what men “with similar demographic characteristics, family situations, work hours, and work experience” are paid.

Department of Labor Audits

Federal contractors are periodically examined by the Department of Labor to see if they are complying with federal laws requiring equal treatment of female and male employees. According to the National Committee on Pay Equity, the DOL still needs to order companies to halt their unequal treatment of women. The NCPE website gives some examples:

  • Texaco, which agreed to pay $3.1 million to 186 female employees who were found to be systematically underpaid compared to their male counterparts.

  • Trigon Blue Cross Blue Shield, which paid $264,901 in back pay to 34 women managers who were paid less than male managers of equal qualifications and seniority.
  • US Airways, which agreed to pay $390,000 in back pay and salary adjustments to 30 women managers who were paid less than their male coworkers.
  • Corestates Financial Corp., which agreed to pay nearly $1.5 million in back wages and salary adjustments to women and minorities. The Labor Department found instances in which employees with more seniority or better performance reviews were paid less because they were women or minorities.

EEOC lawsuits are also worth considering. According to HR Magazine (May 2005), “At least 24,000 sex discrimination complaints have been filed with the EEOC each year since 1998, and the dollar figure for settlements during the same time period has nearly doubled. In 2004 alone, the EEOC resolved more than 10,000 sex discrimination complaints in favor of the charging party and recovered $100.8 million in monetary benefits for charging parties and other aggrieved individuals (not including monetary benefits obtained through litigation).”

Women get less credit for their work.

It’s long been believed by feminists that women often need to accomplish more than men in their field to be given the same credit. A recent study of scientific credit, published in the journal Nature, seems to prove the feminists right.[6]

What the Nature study did was examine productivity (measured in terms of publications in scientific journals, how many times a person was a “lead author” of an article, and how often the articles were cited in scientific journals) and sex. Publication in peer-reviewed scientific journals is often considered to be the most objective and “concrete” sign of accomplishment in the sciences. These factors were then compared to how an actual scientific review panel measured scientific competence when deciding which applicants would receive research grants. Receiving grants like these are essential to the careers of scientific researchers.

The results? Female scientists needed to be at least twice as accomplished as their male counterparts to be given equal credit. For example, women with over 60 “impact points” - the measure the researchers constructed of scientific productivity - received an average score of 2.25 “competence points” from the peer reviewers. In contrast, men with less than 20 impact points also received 2.25 competence points. In fact, only the most accomplished women were ever considered to be more accomplished than men - and even then, they were only seen as more accomplished than the men with the very fewest accomplishments.

Other studies have found similar results. [7]

Discrimination against female consumers.

Most research on economic discrimination has been concentrated on work and working. However, there are other kinds of economic discrimination which should be considered, such as discrimination against consumers. In her book Why Women Pay More, Frances Cerra Whittelsey detailed many examples of women being charged more than men for the same products and services (for example, for dry-cleaning a plain cotton shirt).

Whittelsey’s book in some ways implies that part of the problem is that women may not negotiate as well as men (for instance, she includes some good advice on how to negotiate prices when buying a car). Professor Ian Ayres, of the Northwestern University School of Law, used audit testing to examine this question.[8] Testers of different sexes and races were trained to use a single, uniform negotiating strategy for all car negotiations. Professor Ayres measured both initial offers, before any negations had begun, and final outcomes of negotiations.

The results? White men consistently got far better deals than white women, black women or black men - even though all of them used the same negotiating strategy. According to Professor Ayres, “white women had to pay forty percent higher markups than white men; black men had to pay more than twice the markup; and black women had to pay more than three times the markup of white male testers.” A black woman walking into a car dealership, and negotiating just the same as a white man, ends up paying $900 more for her car.

Footnotes:

[1] Neumark, David (1996). “Sex Discrimination in Restaurant Hiring: An Audit Study.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1996, pages 915-941

[2] Goldin, Claudia and Cecilia Rouse (1997). “Orchestrating Impartiality: The Impact of “Blind” Auditions on Female Musicians.” NBER Working Paper number W5903, issued January 1997.

[3] Quote from page 12 of Furchtgott-Roth, Diana and Christine Stolba (1999). Women’s Figures: An illustrated guide to the economic progress of women in America. Washington, D.C.: The AEI press.

[4] Wood, Robert, Mary Corcoran and Paul Courant (1993). “Pay Differences Among The Highly Paid: the male-female gap in lawyers salaries.” Journal of Labor Economics volume 11 (3), pages 417-441.

[5] Quoted from the National Committee on Pay Equity, at www.feminist.com/fairpay/f_talkingpoints…

[6] Wenneras, Christine and Agnes Wold (1997). “Nepotism and Sexism in Peer-Review.” Nature, volume 387, May 22 1997, pages 341-343.

[7] Wenneras and Wold, for example, cite similar results found by Goldberg (1968), Trans-Action, volume 5 pages 28-30; Nieva and Gutek (1980), Acad. Manag. Rev, volume 5 pages 267-276; and O’Leary and Wallston, Review of Personal Social Psychology volume 2 pages 9-43. Also, see Johnson, Dan (1997). “Getting Noticed in Economics: the determinants of academic citations.” The American Economist, volume 41 (1), Spring 1997, pages 43-52.

[8] Ayres, Ian (1991). “Fair Driving: Gender and Race Discrimination in Retail Car Negotiations.” Harvard Law Review, volume 104 (4), February 1991, pages 817-872.

My wallet was stolen

Posted by Ampersand | October 7th, 2003

This past Sunday, my wallet was stolen. It’s annoying, but it could be worse - imagine if this had happened the week before we closed on the house, for instance, and I hadn’t had any legal I.D. when all those papers needed signing.

I lost the wallet late Sunday afternoon, and by early Sunday evening the thief was using my credit cards to buy bus passes (which I assume are easily converted into currency, or maybe used as currency). Which I find oddly reassuring. If he (she?) hadn’t used the cards, I’d be dithering, wondering if I had really lost my wallet or if it was going to turn up under a sofa cushion next week and I’d be regretting canceling the credit cards.

I bought a new wallet yesterday evening. It occurs to me that my 25 or so walletless hours were the first time I haven’t owned a wallet since I was a child. An odd, brief moment of walletlessness in an otherwise walleted life.

Myth: If women really got paid less for similar work, then employers would replace all of the male workers with female workers (wage gap series, part 8)

Posted by Ampersand | October 7th, 2003

(This is one of a series of posts on the wage gap.)

On page 16 of the anti-feminist economics handbook Women’s Figures, the authors explain that “if women were only paid seventy-four cents on a man’s dollar, then a firm could fire all its men, replace them with women, and have a cost advantage over rivals.” This argument - or some variation of it - is commonplace among anti-feminists (for another example, see Warren Farrell’s discussion in his book The Myth of Male Power).

This argument sounds logical enough - so long as we assume that no other factors aside from the wage gap are operating. But in the real-world economy, other factors are always operating. (Curiously enough, this flawed logic can be used to “prove” not only that discrimination against women doesn’t exist, but also that racial discrimination doesn’t exist, and furthermore that neither racial nor sexual discrimination has ever existed.)

Some industries have, in effect, saved money by gradually replacing a male work force with a female work force. But there are many reasons employers might retain a male workforce, even though the pay gap means that men are paid more on average.

Why employers would retain a male work force.

If the only thing in the world to think about was the gender pay gap, no doubt many employers would look for ways to immediately replace their male workforces. But that’s not how things work in the real world. Employers have many compelling reasons not to fire all the men; here are just a few.

  • To deliberately replace male workers with female workers in order to save money (rather than letting market forces do the same thing more gradually) is a sure way to get sued.

  • The female workforce is not infinite; there aren’t enough women to fill all the jobs in the US currently held by men, in addition to the jobs women already have.
  • Many industries have union contracts to contend with.
  • The transition costs of replacing all one’s male employees (especially in male-dominated workplaces) may well be higher than the costs of the wage gap; hiring and training new workers is very expensive.
  • Those transition costs are even higher when you consider how unhappy and unmotivated the men will be to train their female replacements.
  • Customers in some industries may prefer to be waited on by men (customer-level discrimination is one theory as to why high-price restaurants prefer male servers).
  • The employer may simply be prejudiced, and thus willing to pay the extra price to avoid employing women in some positions (this is conservative economist Gary Becker’s theory).
  • The employer has community relations - and customer relations - to worry about.

For all these reasons and more, the fact that men still find employment is no proof that discrimination doesn’t exist.

Chicken and egg: women replacing men just as wages drop.

Even though employers have strong motivations not to replace male workers with female workers, it still has happened occasionally - although not in the tidy and unrealistic way pay gap critics suggest. When it happens, it’s not a conscious process, but rather the normal workings of a free-but-imperfect market (which makes it hard to recognize that such a thing has happened until it’s over). So in the 1980s, for example, insurance companies cut wages (or allowed inflation to lower wages), and over the same period insurance adjusters changed from a mainly-male occupation to a mainly-female occupation.

Historically, this process has happened many times; for instance, schoolteacher wages dropped as towns discovered that hiring a schoolmarm was cheaper than hiring a male teacher. Similarly, secretarial wages plummeted as that occupation became female-dominated. In a well-documented example, bank tellers changed from a male-dominated to a female-dominated occupation as wages (and prestige) dropped.

So which comes first, wages dropping, or women joining an occupation? This is a chicken-and-egg question. The adjustment from a male workforce to a female workforce is gradual; both changes happen together. A vicious cycle is formed; as more women join the occupation, wages get lower; and as wages get lower, fewer men apply for the job, increasing the proportion of women.

A misunderstanding of what the wage gap actually measures

Finally, the why-don’t-they-fire-all-the-men argument is based on a severe misunderstanding of the wage gap. Contrary to this argument’s assumption, the wage gap does not primarily measure difference in pay between women and men in identical jobs. Read my earlier entry What Causes the Pay Gap? for more information.

Postscript: James (of Hobson’s Choice), responding to Duane (of The Forest for the Trees) in the comments to an earlier post, took a different approach to rebutting this same argument. I hope James won’t mind if I reproduce his comments here:

Duane brings up an argument used by early students of economics. (For those who didn’t understand the argument, it goes like this: if women were paid less than men, employers would hire women since they would cost less. This would drive up the wages of female workers and the discrimination would vanish.)

There are at least two reasons why this is not true. The first is that the labor market is not the same as the market for–say–milled sugar. Discrimination by gender may occur inadvertantly because employers use it to reduce “search” costs, which reflects network externalities to hiring male employees. This is a standard problem in labor markets, which are notoriously inefficient. Not only that, but consider the cultural obstacles of a woman in a job search. Women are barred in nearly all cultures (including ours) from being aggressive in certain situations, yet aggressiveness is usually a decisive factor in selling one’s labor.

The other reason the argument doesn’t work is that labor markets are segmented. In theory, a market where laborers have unlimited movement between markets for which they are qualified, and where good information exists about prices, etc. would not be segmented. Competing firms would have every reason to hire workers from a “global pool” which included women. Discrimination would only harm the discrimator.

But in the world where we live, segmented labor markets can benefit the entrepreneur (in the sense that not discriminating against workers is not part of a Nash Equilibrium). The reason for this is that in most labor markets there is an oligopoly in each sector (e.g., there are only two department stores in my neighborhood) and an oligopsony in each labor market (i.e., there are at most only three plausible employers for a given worker at a given time). Now, because the firm is an oligopoloid firm it will produce at a point where its marginal cost curve intersects its marginal revenue curve. And because it is a monopsony in the labor market, it will hire more workers where the marginal revenue product of new workers is equal to the marginal expense of labor. (The marginal expense of labor is more than the marginal cost because a monopsonoid firm–yes, I spelled that correctly–is increasing the cost of labor as it hires more workers, just as a monopoloid firm lowers the price of its product by producing more).

Both attributes allow employers to make more profits in a segmented labor market than a non-segmented one. And as a result of game theory, which requires more explanation than I want to go into here, it is highly likely that in a realistic labor market discrimination will occur if it is the cultural norm.

The Wage Gap Series, so far

Posted by Ampersand | October 7th, 2003
  1. Different ways of measuring the pay gap

  2. Trends in the Wage Gap
  3. What Causes the Wage Gap?
  4. Myth: The pay gap only exists because men work so many more hours than women.
  5. The Motherhood Myth
  6. Myth: The pay gap only exists because women haven’t been in the workplace as long as men
  7. Myth: The best way to measure the pay gap is to consider only the young and the childless
  8. Myth: If women really got paid less for similar work, then employers would replace all of the male workers with female workers
  9. Some Evidence of Discrimination
  10. Myth: The Wage Gap Is Caused By Men’s Higher Pay For Dangerous Jobs

Myth: The best way to measure the pay gap is to consider only the young and the childless (wage gap series, part 7)

Posted by Ampersand | October 1st, 2003

(This is one of a series of posts on the wage gap.)

So suppose you want to look at the wage gap. The best thing to do is to consider only what happens to young workers without children, right?

This myth, based on an unpublished study by economist June O’Neill, has mainly been propagated by two members of the right-wing Independent Women’s Forum, Diana Furchtgott-Roth and Christine Stolba. A typical example, from an ILF webpage, says: “The ‘wage gap’ frequently mentioned in the press is the result of a crude comparison. This ‘gap’ refers to the average wages of men and women, without regard to important factors such as age, education, occupation, or experience. When those key variables are considered, women earn essentially as much as men. Data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, which does consider these key variables, reveal that among people ages 27 - 33 who have never had a child, women’s earnings are close to 98 percent of men’s.”

(By the way, counting both age and experience, as these folks advocate, is double-counting; age should not effect how much people are paid, except as a proxy for experience).

What other studies say

In fact, it’s not true that studies that account for age, education, occupation and experience - what economists call “human capital” favors - find no wage gap. Blau and Kahn accounted for all these factors and more, but a pay gap still remained. Wood and colleagues’ study of lawyers accounted for all of those factors and more, but again the pay gap wasn’t eliminated. Other scholars who have accounted for human capital differences but still found a substantial pay gap include Bellas, Wellington, Hampton & Heywood, Weinberger, England, Reid & Kilbourne, and Duncan (complete citations to all of these studies can be found at the bottom of this post).

What they miss by ignoring women over age 33

One important difference is in Furchtgott-Roth/Stolba’s unexplained decision to limit their study only to people ages 27-33. As the National Committee on Pay Equity asked, “where does that leave working women who are younger than 27 or older than 33?” It leaves them completely unexamined by the Furchtgott-Roth/Stolba study - which is very convenient, for right-wingers who want to minimize the pay gap.

This method of looking only at young women’s wages is hopelessly flawed. Discrimination in the workforce usually is a matter of “cumulative causation.” Among other things, this means that the effects of discrimination add up over a lifetime. So, for example, losing a single job offer or promotion usually won’t make a big difference; but dozens of such small losses over the course of women’s careers eventually add up to a big wage gap.

This is important, because it means we should expect the pay gap between men and women at the start of their careers to be small. The effects of discrimination build up gradually over time, and only becomes sizable once women have been in the job market long enough for the impacts of dozens of individual instances of discrimination to add up. So when Furchtgott-Roth and Stolba look only at the pay gap among young workers, they’ve selected workers who have not yet been in the workforce long enough to have experienced the worse of the pay gap.

For an example of what I mean, consider the U.S. government’s wage gap figures. Usually we see these presented for everyone in the labor force over the age of 16, but the numbers are also available broken down by age. What we find is that the wage gap gets larger as women get older - just as the theory of cumulative discrimination would predict. When we look only at workers age 16 to 24, the wage gap is 93% (that is, women are paid 93% of what men are paid, on average). But when we look at workers ages 45 to 54, the wage gap is 70%.

In short, Furchtgott-Roth and Stolba haven’t really shown that the wage gap doesn’t exist. All they’ve shown is that the wage gap is at its smallest among young workers - something that feminist economists have known for decades.

References:

Blau, Francine and Lawrence Kahn (1997). “Swimming Upstream: Trends in the Gender Wage Differential in the 1980s.” Journal of Labor Economics, volume 15 (1), part 1, January 1997, pages 1-42.

Wood, Robert, Mary Corcoran and Paul Courant (1993). “Pay Differences Among the Highly Paid: the male-female earnings gap in lawyers’ salaries.” Journal of Labor Economics, volume 11 (3), pages 417-441.

Bellas, Marcia (1994). “Comparable Worth in Academia: The effects on faculty salaries of the sex composition and labor-market conditions of academic disciplines.” American Sociological Review, volume 59, December 1994, pages 807-823.

Wellington, Alison (1994). “Accounting for the Male/Female Wage Gap Among Whites: 1976 and 1985.” American Sociological Review volume 59, December 1994, pages 839-848.

Hampton, Mary and John Haywood (1993). “Do Workers Accurately Perceive Gender Wage Discrimination?” Industrial and Labor Relations Review, volume 47 (1), October 1993, pages 36-49

Weinberger, Catherine (1998). “Race and Gender Wage Gaps in the Market for Recent College Graduates.” Industrial Relations, volume 37 (1), January 1998, pages 67-84.

England, Paula, Lori Reid, and Barbara Kilbourne (1996). “The Effect of the Sex Composition of Jobs on Starting Wages in an Organization: Findings from the NLSY.” Demography, volume 33 (4), November 1996, pages 511-521.

Duncan, Kevin (1996). “Gender Differences in the Effect of Education on the Slope of Experience-Earnings Profiles.” American Journal of Economics and Sociology, volume 55 (4), October 1996, pages 457-471.

UPDATE May 2005: Here are some more relevant studies. I haven’t read every one of these yet; I’m putting them here on my blog because my blog is the only place I can write down stuff like this and not lose it!

Title: Access to Supervisory Jobs and the Gender Wage Gap among Professionals.

Source: Journal of Economic Issues, Dec2003, Vol. 37 Issue 4, p1023, 22p

Abstract: The article presents a study that analyzed the allocation of men and women across supervisory positions as well as the wages earned by male and female supervisors in professional jobs, using controls for background, personal and human capital, and job characteristics. The placement of professional men and women across different firms and establishments may contribute to differential access to supervisory positions and the gender wage gap. Human capital variables, such as education, test scores, job experience, and tenure are expected to have significant impact both in the allocation process and in wage determination of men and women across supervisory positions in professional jobs. On the demand side, job attributes such as firm size, to some extent, reflect the impact of employers and company policies both in the allocation process and in wage determination. The results of this study show that professional women encounter significant barriers in gaining access to meaningful supervisory jobs and in achieving pay equity with their male counterparts. Across all supervisory jobs, women earn only a 6 percent wage premium, while for men the wage premium is about 15 percent. However, among professionals who hold relatively more meaningful supervisory positions, women earn substantially higher wages and the gender wage gap, although significant, is reduced considerably. Clearly, the nature and hierarchy of supervisory positions are important determinants in improving the status of women professionals and reducing the significant gender wage gap in the labor market.

* * *

Journal of Socio-Economics Volume 32, Issue 3 , July 2003, Pages 317-330

Establishment size, employment, and the gender wage gap

Aparna Mitra

Abstract: This study analyzes the allocation of professional males and females in large establishments, and the effects of employment in large establishments on the wages of men and women. The results of this study show that professional women are disproportionately employed in large establishments. Although professional women earn higher wages in large establishments, the gender wage gap is significant in large establishments despite using detailed controls for worker and human capital characteristics. One factor contributing to the significant gender wage gap may be the unequal access and returns to supervisory jobs for women in large establishments.

* * *

Recent two-stage sample selection procedures with an application to the gender wage gap. Louis N. Christofides, Qi Li, Zhenjuan Liu, Insik Min.
Journal of Business & Economic Statistics July 2003 v21 i3 p396(10)

The LMAS data make it possible to consider dummy variables
indicating whether the individual was born outside
Canada (immigrant D 1); whether he or she is disabled and
limited at work (disabled D 1); his or her age (25″“34 is the
omitted category); region of residence [three dummy variables
for the Atlantic region, Quebec, and Prairies/British Columbia
(Ontario is the omitted category)]; and three educational attainment
dummy variables indicating whether the individual has
less education than a high-school diploma (individuals with a
high school diploma is the omitted category), has a postsecondary
diploma, or has a university degree. These variables are
included in both estimation stages. In addition, the ÂŽ rst-stage
equations include dummy variables indicating whether the individual
is married, is the family head, and has his or her own
children under age 18. In the wage equation, y2 is the logarithm
of the hourly wage rate and x2 includes, in addition to the
aforementioned common variables, the individual’s job tenure,
whether he or she is covered by collective bargaining, whether
the job has a pension plan, and three dummy variables referring
to the employing ÂŽ rm’s size. [...]
…only 10:27% of the differential in the mean log-wages can
be explained by superior productivity characteristics for males.
In the Heckman (1979) approach this percentage is 12:44%, in
the Wooldridge (1994) approach it is 10:78%, and in the semiparametric
approach (Li”“Wooldridge) it is 9:10%.

The gender gap in earnings at career entry
Margaret Mooney Marini, Pi-Ling Fan. American Sociological Review. Aug 1997.Vol.62, Iss. 4; pg. 588-604

We propose a new approach to analyzing gender differences in wages. This approach identifies several alternative explanatory mechanisms to account for the sorting of women and men into different types of jobs that offer different levels of reward. Because labor market rewards derive from labor market positions, we study matching processes operating at the micro level that sort workers into existing slots in a given macro-level structure of jobs and associated wages. We focus on the explanation of gender differences in wages at career entry. Analyzing data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth collected between 1979 and 1991, we find that at career entry women earn 84 cents for every dollar men earn. Gender differences in worker characteristics account for only about 30 percent of this wage gap: Gender differences in occupational aspirations have the most important effect, accounting for 16 percent of the wage gap, and gender differences in job-related skills and credentials account for about 14 percent of the wage gap. Gender differences in adult family roles have little direct effect. Our analysis further suggests that the external influences of employing organizations and network processes on gender differences in occupational and industrial placement at career entry account for another 42 percent of the wage gap.

Judge puts rape victim in Jail

Posted by Ampersand | October 1st, 2003

Via Talkleft:

A woman was released from jail Tuesday after spending five days locked up for repeatedly failing to show up in court to testify against a man accused of raping her.[...]

In citing the woman for contempt of court last week, Dinkelacker said, “If victims don’t participate in the system, we don’t have justice.” The woman, who had missed a hearing as well as the two trial dates, told the judge that neighbors threatened her and her children, calling her a snitch.

As TalkLeft notes, wouldn’t it have made more sense for the judge to order police to investigate the threats and provide the woman with protection?

The woman has now agreed to testify, and charges have again been filed against the alleged rapist.

When a judge acts like this, it deters other rape victims from coming forward. What an asshole.