Men
are increasingly entering traditionally female-dominated professions,
according to recent analysis. Shaila Dewan and Robert
Gebeloff reveal that
An
analysis of census data by The
New York Times
shows that from 2000 to 2010, occupations that are more than 70
percent female accounted for almost a third of all job growth for
men, double the share of the previous decade.
Dewan and Gebeloff
offer a variety of plausible explanations for this trend, including
“financial concerns, quality-of-life issues, and a gradual erosion
of stereotypes.” They hypothesize that the stigma of entering
female-dominated professions is lessoning, while, at the same time,
the stability of female dominated professions compared to
male-dominated professions is increasingly attractive in the current
economy.
Whatever the reason, I believe this trend has interesting implications for not
only the gender segregation of labor, but the value of such labor.
Since
the rise of wage-labor during the Industrial Revolution, women's
labor has consistently been devalued relative to men's labor.* This
was the subject of my first blog post, in which I argued that the
“caring professions,” including nursing, teaching, and social
work, are specifically devalued due to being female-dominated
professions.
The
introduction of men into the “pink collar” professions may change
all this. With more men entering these professions, it is possible
that the segregation of labor may slowly begin to erode.
Consequently, as both men and women are represented proportionally in
various professions, the formerly-female-dominated jobs will no
longer be stigmatized as “female,” and will presumably demand a
more equitable salary based on merit, rather than gender.
This
is a promising idea, but it also troubles me for several reasons: