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Reply #8: Related: The Feminine Face of Poverty [View All]

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Triana Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Donate to DU! Mon Apr-23-07 11:19 AM
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8. Related: The Feminine Face of Poverty
By Riane Eisler, AlterNet
Posted on April 19, 2007, Printed on April 23, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/50727 /

If you're a woman, or a man who cares about his mother, sister, or daughter, there's something you need to know. Seventy percent of those living in absolute poverty in our world -- that is starving or on the edge of starvation -- are female. Not only that, in our wealthy United States, women and children are the mass of the poor and the poorest of the poor.

Women are entitled to know that statistically women worldwide are far more likely to be poor than men. Even if you're a guy, this "women's issue" is about your mother and your grandmother. It's about your sisters and it's about the future of your daughters.

Consider that in the United States women over the age of 65 are twice as poor as men in the same age group. And there's a reason poverty so disproportionately hits women. Most of these poor women were, or still are, caregivers. And we've got an economic system that gives no visibility or value to this essential work when it's done in the home.

In fact, according to economists, the people who do the caring work in households, whether female or male, are "economically inactive." Of course, anyone who has a mother knows that most caregivers work from dawn to dusk. And we also know that without their work of caring for children, for the sick, and for the elderly, there would be no workforce, no economy, nothing.

Yet current economic indicators and policies fail to include this work. Measures of productivity such as GDP (gross domestic product) not only include activities that harm and even take life -- such as making cigarettes plus the resulting medical and funeral bills -- but fail to include the life-sustaining activities that contribute the most to human well being. The life-sustaining work of caring for people and maintaining a clean and healthy home environment still performed primarily by women in households is not included as "productive work."

http://www.alternet.org/rights/50727/
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  Gender pay gap emerges early, study finds UpInArms  Apr-23-07 08:37 AM   #0 
   It emerged in high school for me. Girls babysat for 50 cents an hour and boys...  MookieWilson   Apr-23-07 08:38 AM   #1 
   now girls are charging  newsjunki   Apr-23-07 08:49 AM   #2 
      Have you ever taken care of a small child?  yardwork   Apr-23-07 11:20 AM   #9 
      I figured out one hour of mowing a lawn was a LOT easier than babysitting nt  MookieWilson   Apr-23-07 02:13 PM   #10 
      Where's that?  GoddessOfGuinness   Apr-24-07 12:05 AM   #14 
   On payday, it's still a man's world (& pay DROPS over the years)  rodeodance   Apr-23-07 11:00 AM   #3 
   Hardly a surprise...  Triana   Apr-23-07 11:00 AM   #4 
   They didn't need to spend money to study this - just ask any woman.  leftyladyfrommo   Apr-23-07 11:00 AM   #5 
   Sadly, no one I know w/be surprised. And didn't I hear something about revival of the ERA recently?  cyberpj   Apr-23-07 11:00 AM   #6 
   I wonder what happens when you include or exclude billionaires from the study. (nt)  w4rma   Apr-23-07 11:16 AM   #7 
   That has no effect. These are wage earners, smae jobs, different pay.  SharonAnn   Apr-23-07 07:47 PM   #12 
   Related: The Feminine Face of Poverty  Triana   Apr-23-07 11:19 AM   #8 
   Do men relocate for their wives job?  One_Life_To_Give   Apr-23-07 02:32 PM   #11 
      Sometimes, yes. It's more frequent than it used to be. Again, this has no effect on the study.  SharonAnn   Apr-23-07 07:49 PM   #13 
         Concider checking how different employers treat women  One_Life_To_Give   Apr-24-07 10:25 AM   #15 
 

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