Working Women Make More than Their Mothers and Less Than Their Fathers

Women have made significant inroads into the workforce over the past few decades, increasing levels of labor participation, education, and share of earnings. But an income gap lingers, and not just between women and their male peers.

Working women today earn more than their mothers did, on average, but they still make less than their fathers did at similar stages in their lives, according to a study released Tuesday by Pew Charitable Trusts tracking female economic mobility across generations. The study compares women who entered their “prime working years” (approximately 40 years old) in the 1970s with their daughters, who reached 40 in the early 2000s, by measuring participation rates, hours worked, and wages earned.

Unsurprisingly, the “daughters” in the study worked more hours and had higher wages than the “mothers” – the latter group worked an average of 24 hours a week and earned about $10 an hour. The daughters worked 34 hours a week at an average of $19 per hour, which translated to three times more earnings than their mothers.

The explanation is fairly simple: more women, including mothers, are working these days. Only 53 percent of the mothers surveyed earned wages between 1972 and 1986, compared with 85 percent of the daughters.

Likewise, 85 percent of the working daughters in the study earned more than their actual mothers. But less than half earned higher wages than their fathers during their prime working years.

The gap grows more pronounced with wealth – among the highest earners, only 21 percent of women earned more than their dads. By comparison, 70 percent of sons had higher hourly wages than fathers, and 63 percent of the highest earnings group made more.

“At every rung of the economic ladder, women’s median wages rose by 50 percent or more, but daughters continue to earn lower hourly wages than fathers did on the same rung,” the study reads. “Daughters working full time contribute more than half of family incomes, strengthening financial security. The extent of this contribution, however, varies based on family structure: Daughters who are in a couple (either married or cohabiting) supply 45 percent.”

Given a persistent wage gap (full-time female workers earn about 77 cents for every dollar a man earns) and many of the roadblocks that still exist for working women and especially mothers, the finding isn’t a huge shock.

Women are underpaid relative to men even in fields like medicine, and there are differences in labor force participation during peak childbearing years.  Fathers get a wage premium, while employers are less likely to hire mothers. And reports say that a majority of mothers are working, but we don’t have adequate childcare. All of this puts women in a secondary labor market.

Even high-achieving women have a tendency to make their husband’s careers a higher priority, not because they want to but purely for economic reasons. Men often have better earning potential to begin with, so it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Still, the Pew study and others note that women have more of a bearing than ever on a household’s economic mobility. 40 percent of American mothers, including single moms, are now the primary breadwinners for their families, up from 11 percent in 1960.  Significant changes are still needed for income equality.

Wage Equality?

China-Taiwan Trade Deal to Proceed Despite Protests

Student protests in Taipei against a new services trade agreement with Beijing are getting lots of headlines this week.  But they aren’t likely to scuttle the deal.

While President Ma Ying-jeou’s efforts to deepen ties between Taiwan and mainland China are contentious, the protests, including an occupation of the parliament, also highlight public discontent with his domestic policies and his governing style.

The protests stem from “an accumulation of frustrations about domestic issues, it’s not just China,” our correspondent notes. People feel “too many things are happening without the public review and public explanation that people want.”

The agreement itself, signed last July, would liberalize trade in services between Taiwan and China. That holds promise but also potential peril for smaller Taiwanese firms. It follows the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement that President Ma signed with Beijing in 2010, a landmark step in the thaw in economic and political relations between Beijing and Taipei that has occurred on his watch.

Ma met with protesters and made some concessions. But despite concerns in some quarters about the deepening economic ties – after all, Beijing sees Taiwan as a province that must someday be reintegrated into the country – they appear likely to continue apace.

The protest leaders seem to be losing some of their followers already. And as far as the agreement goes, nobody is talking about pulling back the deal.

China-Taiwan

Britain Refuses to Extradite Convicted Mafioso

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports:  Britain has been accused of creating a “haven for the mafia” by refusing to extradite a convicted member of the crime organisation because of poor prison conditions he would face in Italy. Franco Roberti, Italy’s top anti-mafia prosecutor, described the decision as “devastating”, saying it would enable members of the mafia to take advantage of what he described as Britain’s apparently lax approach to fighting organised crime.

A senior district judge at Westminster Magistrates Court last week turned down Italy’s request for the extradition of mafia boss Domenico Rancadore, citing a ruling by the European court which claimed there was “a systemic problem” with its prison system, leading to degrading and inhuman treatment of inmates.

But Italian magistrates and politicians have reacted furiously to the British court’s ruling, claiming it threatens to undermine their fight against the Mafia.  Westminster Magistrate’s Court discharged Rancadore.

The ruling will come as a huge blow for the Italian authorities, who said Rancadore faced seven years in prison over the 1999 conviction. He is accused of being a “prominent representative” and a former “man of honour” in the Sicilian mafia offshoot, Cosa Nostra, for whom he allegedly collected bribes from builders in Trabia, near Palermo.

The mobster, who is accused of being a former “man of honour” in the Cosa Nostra group, fled to London with his wife in 1994 and lived under the radar for two decades before detectives raided his home last August.

Senior district judge Howard Riddle discharged Rancadore at Westminster magistrates court. In his 21-page judgment, Riddle said he could not accept assurances from the Italian authorities that prison conditions in the country would not breach Rancadore’s human rights.

The ruling represents a surprising turnaround for the judge, who said his original decision was to extradite Rancadore because he was satisfied that the European arrest warrant was valid and that to send him to Italy would not breach his human rights.

However, Riddle changed his decision following the ruling in a similar case involving the court of Florence and Hayle Abdi Badre. Riddle told the court that a recent ruling involving the court of Florence meant that he had to reject Italy’s request to extradite Rancadore.  The court heard concerns about overcrowding in Italian jails during a two-day extradition hearing last month.  Rancadore Ruling

Mafioso Freed in Britain

TIAW Global Forum Honors Melanne Verveer

At a thrilling gathering of women (and men) from the world over who are working to make the world better for women, Melanne Verveer delivered an inspired address.  Verveer was chief of staff for first lady Hillary Clinton, President Obama’s choice as the first Ambassador for Global Women’s Issues, and is currently Executive Director for the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security.

She pointed out that 2015 marks the 20th anniversary of the World Conference on Women in Beijing in which Clinton forcefully remarked, “It is time for us to say here in Beijing, and the world to hear, that it is no longer acceptable to discuss women’s rights as separate from human rights.”

Ambassador Verveer noted the progress women have made, the work that remains to be done, and the miles we must go before we sleep.  The women she addressed are part of the progress, step by step, in educating women to take their independent place, in encouraging them to dare to be scientists and engineers, to always reach out so another voice can be heard.

The rustling of handwoven Indian silks and the bright geometry of Ugandan robes dressed up the meeting rooms.  A neatly attired Flora Villanosa, in muted browns and tans, is Mayor of what was once the Philippines poorest town.  She gave up her salary for three years and turned the town around.  So many remarkable stories, or her-stories as New Zealander Amanda Ellis, an Ambassador to the UN office in Geneva called them.  Thanks to Lisa Kaiser Hickey, TIAW’s President, a good time to be a working woman.

TIAW

Dodd Frank and the Commodity Market

Commissioner Scott D. O’Malia talked about t is crucially important for the Commission to improve and effectively utilize its data so that the Commission develops a complete picture of both the swaps and the futures markets. In many respects, many of the questions regarding the impact of financialization on the commodity markets would be answerable if the Commission had a complete picture of market participants and their trading strategies. the Commission must be mindful of the impact that its regulations have on the cost of hedging in the markets. This is especially true in the commodity markets where a wide range of participants hedge because of the volatility in commodity prices and specialized business needs. If the cost of hedging becomes too expensive, these participants may choose not to hedge or enter into less perfect hedges, which impairs efficient business operations. 

Therefore, looking forward, the Commission must strive to issue clear, consistent, and cost effective rules that are informed by data and that do not interfere with hedging in the markets. Finally, the Commission must re-visit rules that have proved unworkable or overly burdensome. I am encouraged that the Commission has taken the first step by re-visiting its data rules. I encourage the Commission to not stop there and continue to re-visit rules that have impacted legitimate hedging activities. Scott O’Malia’s Address

Commodities Markets

Afghanistan Risks Blacklisting For Corruption

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports;  If Afghanistan does not do more to combat corruption in its financial sector by June, the country risks being “blacklisted” by an inter-governmental task force — which the U.S. watchdog for Afghan reconstruction (SIGAR) said would would be “devastating” for the sector and the overall economy.

In the most dangerous country in the world for aid workers and where armed insurgents still control large swathes of territory, the reconstruction effort’s number one enemy should be corruption, John Sopko, the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction, said.

Attracting and maintaining foreign investment is vital to sustaining Afghanistan’s economy as U.S. assistance funding – which has totalled over $102 billion so far – declines.

Sopko criticized U.S. government agencies for failing to produce a comprehensive anti-corruption strategy, claiming that unless corruption is specifically targeted and combated it could be the “spoiler” that “will jeopardize every gain we have made over the last 12 years.”

Corruption in Afghanistan’s financial sector presents a particular threat to the country’s ability to attract foreign investment: “Failure to sufficiently reform and regulate the banking sector is putting the country’s immediate future development at risk.”

Sopko reported that the Financial Action Task Force, an inter-governmental body that sets the standards required to combat money laundering, terrorist financing, and other threats to the integrity of the international financial system, recently downgraded Afghanistan’s status based on the country’s lack of progress implementing its much-touted anti-money laundering and terrorist financing action plan.

If Afghanistan continues to fall short on these measures, the FATF could “blacklist” the country as early as June, an outcome the SIGAR chief said would be “devastating” for the country.   Atlantic Council Remarks

Afghan Corruption

California AG Fights Transnational Organized Crime

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports:  International criminal enterprises follow the money, and a report being released Thursday says they are increasingly focusing on California because of its wealth and innovation. The report by California Attorney General Kamala Harris says criminals are turning to cybercrime to target businesses and financial institutions.

It calls California the top target in the U.S. for organizations that often operate from safe havens in Eastern Europe, Africa and China.

California leads all states in the number of computer systems hacked or infected by malware, the number of victims of Internet crimes, the amount of financial losses suffered as a result and the number of victims of identity fraud. The report says the state also is particularly vulnerable to thefts of intellectual property because of its leading role in developing new technologies and mass-media entertainment.

“Not surprisingly, transnational organized crime has tapped into this new criminal frontier,” the report says. “Many of these breaches have been tied to transnational criminal organizations operating from Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Israel, Egypt, China, and Nigeria, among other places.” Hackers are becoming ever more sophisticated. People should have a “multi-layered” type of protection.

California’s gross domestic product of $2 trillion, significant foreign trade activity and border with Mexico also makes the state an easy target for international money-laundering schemes, the report says. It estimates that more than $30 billion is laundered through California’s economy each year.

Some is filtered through legitimate businesses or by using virtual currencies such as bitcoin. But the report says backpacks and duffel bags stuffed with cash have been seized more frequently since Mexico began toughening its money-laundering laws in 2010.Seizures of bulk cash increased 40 percent by 2011 in California, which now leads the nation in the number of currency seizures.

California should alter state law to make it easier for prosecutors to crack down on money laundering, the report says.  The report also recommends that the Legislature change state law to let prosecutors temporarily freeze the assets of transnational criminal organizations and associated gangs before they seek an indictment.

It also calls for the state to devote more money to the state Department of Justice, which Harris leads. That would include $7.5 million to fund five new teams that would target international criminals.   California’s Fight Against Transnational Crime

Kamala D. Harris, California AG

Bulgarian Entrepreneurs Join Forces

Selena was formed to promote and aid entrepreneurship in Bulgaria. Their purpose is:

To support women entrepreneurs and professionals in their professional and entrepreneurial development, through training courses, information exchange and business meetings, through intensification of international contacts and business internationalization, exchanges within the best European practices and participation in projects financed by the EUTo adopt and administer professional ethics, to create the conditions needed for women entrepreneurs to contribute effectively toward solving problems regarding the development of women’s entrepreneurship, at a national and European level

To collaborate with all the competent institutions in order to promote support activities for the development of women’s entrepreneurship, to enable women to join any public or private local, national or international organization, to collaborate with bodies, movements or associations with which it is considered useful to have contacts

To promote the professional training and goals of the Association through information dissemination, the organization of conferences, seminars, publications and professional modernization aimed at enhancing women’s knowledge of enterprise innovation

To promote partnership initiatives at a national and international level with associations having analogous activities and aims, and to implement the European projects and programmes

Selena

California Attorney Imprisoned for Hiding Money in Swiss Accounts

WASHINGTON – California attorney Christopher M. Rusch was sentenced to serve 10 months in prison for helping his clients Stephen M. Kerr and Michael Quiel, both businessmen from Phoenix, hide millions of dollars in secret offshore bank accounts at UBS AG and Pictet & Cie in Switzerland, the Justice Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today. U.S. District Judge James A. Teilborg also ordered Rusch to serve three years of supervised release following his prison sentence. On Feb. 6, 2013, Rusch pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud the government and failing to file a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). Kerr and Quiel were sentenced in September 2013 to each serve 10 months in prison after both were tried and convicted of filing false income tax returns for 2007 and 2008. The jury also convicted Kerr of failing to file FBARs for 2007 and 2008.  Hiding Money in Swiss Accounts

Swiss Banks

Can Money Laundering Be Stopped?

Oligarchs the world over grab money from public and criminal coffers.  They are not dumb.  They want their money where it will be safe, private and well cared for.  They want their money in Western democracies.  Western democracies have welcomed this tainted money.  Governments avert their gaze.  Bankers feather their own nests.  What will it take to stop the flow?  Do we have the political will to do this?  Money Laundering

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