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January 12, 2021

Women's Employment Still Reeling from Pandemic’s Effects

According to the latest analysis by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the pandemic and lockdowns continue to have an outsize effect on women’s employment in the U.S. with fewer than half (44.6%) of the jobs women lost between February and December returning. Another way of looking at it is that roughly 12 million jobs simply disappeared. Or, as Representative Katie Porter tweeted, “Women. Accounted. For. All. The. Losses.

Reporting on these devastating losses in the economic sector has become something of a broken record talking point for us, but we think it is, now more than ever, essential to continue highlighting it for fear that people become complacent or accept this first female recession as the new normal. 

It is important to think about the industries in which there was significant job loss and consider the reasons why women, especially immigrant and Black women are overrepresented in them, which includes hospitality, domestic work and childcare. We also need to think why so many more women have been unable to return to work when compared to their male peers. 

Many of these reasons are intimately connected to issues of who in our culture is thought to be responsible for social reproduction. Women still do the majority of unpaid domestic labor and because there remains a sizable wage gap along gender lines, when a family is faced with pulling one parent out of the workforce, the calculus usually rests on a simple assessment of who earns more money, most often the male. One need look no further than the statistics for prime-working age women where fewer than 75% of women are employed or seeking work. 

These issues are particularly devastating to poor and working class women whose jobs have not recovered in the same manner as professional women’s work. As economists and analysts feared, we are starting to see a K-shaped recovery, where employment is bifurcated, with professionals and upper management reclaiming their work while employment for lower-wage earners drying up. This can be seen in proxy through white women’s December employment gains (+106,000) when compared to the losses Black, Asian and Latinx women experienced (-318,000).

This comes against a backdrop of overall employment growth that has started to stagnate. According to the latest monthly employment figures, the U.S. economy lost jobs for the first time since the lockdowns in April, shedding 140,000 jobs. 


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The Rhetoric of Choice Obscures Our Social Obligations to Parents

January 30, 2020
Paid Family Leave
FMLA
Pregnancy Discrimination
Leave
Who should foot the bill or take responsibility for social reproduction as more women were pressed into the workforce, government or the individual? In the US, the answer was resounding: the individual. And this has had significant consequences for working parents since. By placing the responsibility on the individual, almost always the mother, parents have been in a bind for decades and any "choices" available reside in an astonishingly thin sliver of options constrained by structural inequalities

Female Flight Attendants and Pilots File Discrimination Suit Against Frontier Airlines, Alleging Discrimination against Pregnant and Nursing Mothers

January 13, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Pregnancy Discrimination
Two lawsuits were filed against Frontier airlines alleging that the Company required pregnant employees to suspend work duties months before they were scheduled to give birth, forcing employees to use their vacation days in lieu of paid time off, take unpaid maternity leave without Frontier providing alternatives for work, and refuse to accommodate breastfeeding and pregnant workers.

New Report from Uber Highlights the Risks of Driving in the Gig Economy

January 6, 2020
Sexual Harassment
Among the most significant risks to Uber drivers were those in the form of sexual and physical assault on the job, with 42% of assault cases being reported by drivers. The most common assault reported by drivers and riders was "non-consensual touching of a sexual body part," with 1,560 cases reported in 2018 alone.

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