By Mona Charen
Tuesday, February 04, 2014
From one point of view, President Barack Obama's
invocation of the hoary "77 cents" myth regarding the relative earnings
of women and men was a shallow and cheap political pander. Democrats, eager to
maintain their advantage with women voters, stoke grievance. It's the same
playbook they've used to solidify their standing with black voters -- suggest
whenever and wherever possible that Republicans are racists. It's crude,
offensive and libelous -- but effective.
Yet Obama fancies himself an intellectual. Campaigning
against Ken Cuccinelli in Virginia, the president chastised the Republican for
challenging climate change, saying, "It has to do with what's true. It has
to do with facts. You don't argue with facts." Many in the press and in
progressive circles regard this president as a bit of a thought leader.
So it's remarkable that he is willing to betray how out
of touch he is with social science by peddling the decades-old and utterly
outdated idea that our great challenge as a society is ensuring women equal pay
for equal work. He could not be more dated if he were issuing calls to improve
phonograph needles.
Conservatives like Christina Hoff Sommers, Charles Murray
and Kay Hymowitz, have long been drawing attention to the declining fortunes of
boys and men in American society. They have been joined recently by
nonconservative scholars and researchers as well.
A paper by two Massachusetts Institute of Technology
economists, "Wayward Sons," published by the center/left think tank
Third Way, outlines the startling decline in the fortunes of moderately to
poorly educated men over the past several decades. The title of the opening
chapter is direct: "Women Gain Ground, Men Lose Ground." Starting
with the cohort born in 1951, a gender gap in high school completion has opened
up and continues to grow. More girls than boys are graduating from high school.
The college picture is even starker. Whereas the high
school graduation rate for males has stagnated (while women's has improved),
college attendance for males has declined while women have advanced.
"Females born in 1975 were roughly 17 percent more likely than their male
counterparts to attend college and nearly 23 percent more likely to complete a
four-year degree." Young women are also more ambitious and have higher
hopes for their futures than young men.
Much attention has focused on the decline of blue-collar
jobs over the past several decades, and "Wayward Sons" duly
acknowledges that the loss of low-skilled jobs to automation, globalization and
de-unionization may have contributed to the notable decline in wages suffered
by less educated men in the past several decades. But the puzzling fact is
women with equivalent levels of education have not suffered the same income
declines, nor have women's labor force participation rates declined as men's
have. While men's wages have declined for all but the most educated since 1979,
women's wages have increased for all but the least educated. Women's income
gains have far outstripped men's at every level of education, particularly
among college graduates ages 40 to 64.
"Wayward Sons" considers the possibilities --
are women better at the tasks a highly information-rich economy rewards? Is the
loss of brawny jobs to blame for men's falling labor force participation and
declining earnings? Each theory gets a hearing.
At length, the authors come to the elephant in the room: the
dramatic change in family structure since 1970. In that year, 69 percent of
black men without a high school diploma were married. By 2010, only 17 percent
were. The marriage rate among non-college attending whites and Hispanics has
declined precipitously as well.
The link between family composition and child welfare is
well-established. What "Wayward Sons" adds is data on the
differentially harmful effects of fatherlessness on sons versus daughters.
"Growing up in a single-parent home appears to significantly decrease the
probability of college attendance for boys, yet has no similar effect for
girls." Boys from such homes "are 25 percentage points more likely to
be suspended in the eighth grade than girls from these households, whereas the corresponding
gender gap between boys and girls from households with two biological parents
was only 10 percentage points."
A vicious cycle is clearly underway. Poorly educated
women do not find marriageable mates among low-earning or jobless young men.
Women then raise children alone and handicap their sons more than their
daughters, and the cycle repeats itself.
The collapse of the marriage culture is arguably the
"defining issue of our time." Neither men nor women thrive without
marriage, but men and boys seem to suffer more. Fatherlessness is driving
income inequality, child poverty and declining mobility. But Obama is manning
the barricades on "equal pay for equal work" -- a matter addressed by
Congress in 1963.
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