With all of this blather about financial bottom lines, I’d just like to point out a small fact: the majority of the poor people in this country are women. So any budget plan that cuts funding for the poor is cutting funding for women, especially single mothers with children.
It’s embarrassing that we have the largest gap in poverty rates between men & women in the Western world.
Here are some other useful facts the next time someone starts going on about budgets and bottom lines and how there’s no need for feminism:
- 13% of women over the age of 65 are poor; only 6% of men that age are.
- The poverty gap between women and men widens significantly between ages 18 and 24—20.6 percent of women are poor at that age, compared to 14.0 percent of men. The gap narrows, but never closes, throughout adult life, and it more than doubles during the elderly years.
Why? Not just because of the wage gap, which is still significant – 77 cents on the dollar these days – but also because
- women provide far more unpaid care giving than men,
- they are still responsible for most of the unpaid childcare,
- women still get pregnant and lose jobs as a result, and finally,
- women lose paid work days dealing with the sexual and other violence.
So how about we actually work on a plan that eliminates sexual violence against women to balance the fucking budget, instead?
(h/t to Dylan.)