THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Women still want to marry men who are better educated and earn more money than them, a report finds today.
The idea that women dislike being financially dependent on men is a myth, with more choosing to “marry up” now than did so in the 1940s, according to Dr Catherine Hakim from the London School of Economics.
After decades of gender equality campaigning many women now find it hard to admit that they want to be a housewife more than they want a successful career of their own, she said.
The study comes after the Coalition announced a series of measures intended to narrow the pay gap between men and women.
Lynne Featherstone, the Liberal Democrat equalities minister, said large companies could be forced to declare how much more they pay men and announced that firms would be able to use “positive action” to recruit new staff from under-represented groups for the first time.
However, Dr Hakim criticised David Cameron for backing the idea of quotas to ensure that more women gain seats on the boards of leading companies. Men dominate top positions because many women simply do not want long careers in business, she said.
Despite 40 years of reforms to promote gender equality at work, a woman’s financial dependence on a man “has lost none of its attractions”, she said. >>> Tim Ross, Social Affairs Editor | Tuesday, January 04, 2011
CENTRE FOR POLICY STUDIES: Feminist Myths and Magic Medicine: The flawed thinking behind calls for further equality legislation >>> Catherine Hakim
THE DAILY TELEGRAPH BLOGS: So the feminist man-haters and victim-mongers were wrong all along >>> Cristina Odone | Tuesday, January 04, 2011