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Home arrow Reviews arrow Fiction arrow Are We Paid What We Are Worth? - Book Excerpt
Are We Paid What We Are Worth? - Book Excerpt PDF Print E-mail
Book Reviews - Home and Finances
Written by Liz Perle   
Money, A Memoir coverThe following is an excerpt from the book Money, A Memoir
by Liz Perle

Statistically speaking, women still earn only 78 percent of what men do, as noted earlier, and at our present glacial rate of progress it will take close to fifty years until we achieve parity. There are a host of reasons why this is true: Women stop working to take care of kids; women move from full- to part-time work in order to take care of family. But the plain truth is -- and it's not an easily quantifiable one -- women don't fight for money the way men do.

We simply don't ask to be paid what we're worth. Lisa Barron, a professor of organizational behavior at the University of California, Irvine, conducted a study where she held mock job interviews and made salary offers to both men and women. She offered everyone $61,000 for the same job and then looked at the responses by gender. By the end of the negotiations, the men in the study had settled on an average salary of $68,556; the women, $67,000. Seventy percent of the men felt they were entitled to earn more than anyone else, while a similar percentage of women said they should earn what others earned. But most revealing, 85 percent of the men said they knew what they were worth. A similar number of women responded that they weren't sure.

What makes this study even more remarkable is that all the participants were MBA students.

Women simply didn't feel comfortable thinking of themselves in monetary terms, Barron concluded. When asked to comment on these findings, Shelia Wellington, the president of Catalyst, an organization that focuses on the concerns of women and careers, observed, "Women have trouble tooting their own horns, shining a light on themselves. It shows up around salary."

There's another distinctly female force at work that affects our salaries. It goes back to our hardwiring. Since it is in the nature of women to survive by keeping relationships and networks in working, mutually supportive order, behaviors that might involve pitting one person against another -- even in the name of making more money -- are not going to feel right or comfortable. This is one of the reasons that women rarely share salary information with one another. Doing so establishes instant hierarchies, which, by their very nature, put us on different planes from one another, thus separating us. We may not mind the fact that different levels exist, but we don't want another woman diminished by our success.

When we take the more affiliative, female perspective into organizational environments where the compensation and promotion systems were historically created for men, women wind up being penalized. We play by different rules with different criteria for what constitutes both success and acceptable behavior. Cutthroat behavior can be an asset even in a company that says it values teamwork. Most companies still operate by hierarchies, which are more natural constructs for men than for women.

Deborah Tannen, a linguistics professor at Georgetown University and author of the classic You Just Don't Understand, observes that gender can affect our compensation at work. "When hiring an employee, the employer knows that a man will take the job that pays him the most. But a woman will often take a lower-paying job because she likes other things about the job. This goes hand in hand with women having lower salaries. If a company can lure a woman without offering her more money than they have to, they certainly will."

Belinda, a senior executive at a big-city newspaper, was struck by the difference she found in men's and women's responses to her initial queries in her search for a new editor. "To a man (and I do mean that literally)," she told me, "every man I called was willing to meet with me to discuss the opening. They understood that even if they didn't want to leave their current positions, it couldn't hurt to make a good impression on a potential employer. I'm sure a few of them also thought they could parlay a job offer into a raise or promotion in their present positions."

Her experience with the women she approached couldn't have been more different. "More than half the women I called begged off even an introductory interview on the grounds that they just didn't feel they should waste my time. But I also got the distinct impression that they interpreted an interview as being disloyal to their current employers." Since one key way to get promoted and increase salary involves switching companies, these women are probably going to sacrifice position or money. This points out a fundamental difference in what women value. We are willing to sacrifice money for connection. But the trade hurts us financially."


Copyright © 2006 Liz Perle

Liz Perle, who worked in book publishing as an editor and publisher for more than twenty years, recently joined the nonprofit world, where she is the editor in chief of Common Sense Media, the nation's leading nonpartisan organization designed to help families make the best media choices for their children. She is also the author of When Work Doesn't Work Anymore. Perle lives in San Francisco with her husband and two children.

For more information, please visit www.moneyamemoir.com
Read DivaTribe's Review of Money, A Memoir, written by M. J. Chatfield, Ph. D.
 
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