The increase to women’s participation in the labor force is because of many factors. In the early 1940’s many men left America’s work force and were called for war. This led many women to join the workforce, with the shortage of supply of male workers. Although at this time many women joined the labor force they were being paid an incredibly smaller wage than the men they replaced. In 1942 the National War Labor Board recommended firms to pay an equal salary or wage to women that was comparable to the same type of work men were performing (Brunner). This request was not a law and firms did not voluntarily jump to pay women a higher wage, so in 1963 the Equal Pay Act was enforced. This law made it illegal to pay women lower rates for the same job based merely on their sex. Women still had been receiving considerably lower wages than males for years before the law was in place, so between 1964 and 1971 back wages totaling more than $26 million were paid to 71,000 women (Brunner). Generations later women could not possibly believe the actual and obvious discrimination that women received, like segregated listings of wages based on gender for the same job, but we all know that women’s wages are still lower than men’s. In 2005 women’s wages were still only 81% of men’s wages (Brunner).
This increase in the market wage for women has a great impact on their choices of joining the labor market, especially non-working women. The increase in the market
Cited: Brunner, Borgna. The Wage Gap: A History of Pay Inequality and the Equal Pay Act, Rosie the Riveter; Patriotic and Underpaid. Information Please Database. Pearson Education Inc: 2006. < http://www.infoplease.com/spot/equalpayact1.html > Chao, Elaine L., Katharine P. Utgoff. Women in the Labor Force: A Databook. U.S. Department of Labor. Report 973. February 2004. < http://www.bls.gov/cps/wlf-databook.htm > Women in the Labor Force 1900-2005. Information Please Database. Pearson Education Inc: 2006. < http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0104673.html >