Although they earn a majority of secondary degrees and constitute a majority of voters, women, particularly low-income women, continue to struggle in education and employment. According to a new report by Maria Shriver and the Center for American Progress, “the key findings paint a portrait of an estimated 42 million women — and 28 million dependent children — saddled with financial hardship.”
American society today doesn’t follow the idealized American Dream of a working father, stay-at-home mother, two beautiful children, and a white picket fence. In fact, forty percent of American households with dependent children have mothers as the primary or only breadwinner. Female workers are still not making the same amount of money as their full-time male counterparts, earning on average only 77 percent as much as men.
After surveying 3,500 adults across the United States, the report also finds that of low-income female respondents:
75 percent wish they had devoted more time and energy to education and career — relative to 58 percent of the general population.
73 percent wish they had made better financial decisions over the course of their lives — and so did 65 percent of the total survey group.
Low-income women are more likely than men to regret tying the knot when they did — 52 percent versus 33 percent.
And nearly one-third of low-income women with children wish they had postponed having children — or had fewer of them.
Shriver argues for the relevance and importance of making gender equality a national priority, saying,“Women are at the center of our country…When women do well, men do well and the nation does well.”
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Friday Roundup: Jan. 24, 2014 » The Editors' Desk — January 24, 2014
[…] Women and Poverty on Citings and Sightings […]
Penny — February 12, 2014
"Female workers are still not making the same amount of money as their full-time male counterparts, earning on average only 77 percent as much as men."
And there are good reasons for this, like taking years out of the job market to raise children. Single women in their twenties actually make more money than men.