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A project of the Toronto & York Region Labour Council in partnership with George Brown College. [COPE 343] |
New Report reveals a widening
wage gap between men and women in Canada
March 6, 2008
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According to the
report Working Women: Still a Long Way from
Equality, women in Canada who worked full-time, full-year jobs in
2005 earned just 70˝ cents for every dollar earned by men in full-time,
full-year jobs.
Compare this to the 72 cents women
earned for every dollar earned by men doing similar work in the 1990s and it’s
clear things have not improved despite the fact that more women have invested in
post-secondary education and more women have delayed having children in order to
establish themselves in the workforce.
In fact, over the past ten years,
women with post-secondary degrees have lost the most ground. Ten years ago, the
wage gap saw them earning 75 cents for every dollar earned by men with the same
qualifications. Today, their earnings have slipped to just 68 cents.
Byers says the deck is stacked
against women largely because our workplaces and our social and labour market
policies have failed to reflect the realities of womens’ lives.
“Women are still expected to be the
lead caregivers at home. It’s still largely our job to take care of the kids,
manage the household and, increasingly, our responsibility to care for aging
parents. This limits the choices a woman has when she needs to work,” she says.
Many employers demand long hours
from full-time workers, fail to provide work schedules which match family needs,
and penalize workers who take temporary leaves. This pushes many women into
part-time jobs that are more unstable and pay less. It forces them to pay a big
price if they drop out of the workforce for a year or two, or decide to work
very long hours and not have children.
“We’ve been equal participants in
To push for change, Byers says the
labour movement is launching
a year-long campaign to tell
Canadians about the wage gap and how to close it. She says the report identifies
a number of changes that would make a big difference, including:
“Unionizing every workplace in the
country would certainly make a huge difference and close the wage gap. But we
know that’s not going to happen. It’s not for everybody. So let’s start talking
about the things we can do for everybody because paying women 70˝ cents for
every dollar of work we do has got to go,” says Byers. The Canadian Labour Congress, the national voice of
the labour movement, represents 3.2 million Canadian workers. The CLC brings
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