Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis

There are likely to be important gender differences in both the short and long term effects of economic downturns (ILO, 2009; Tutnjevic, 2002). Typically the differences are attributable to three contrasts between the working lives of men and women. Firstly, women are traditionally over represented...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jefferson, Therese, Preston, Alison
Format: Journal Article
Published: Journal of Australian Political Economy 2009
Online Access:http://australianpe.wix.com/japehome#!jape-64/c9yz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43759
_version_ 1848756798410981376
author Jefferson, Therese
Preston, Alison
author_facet Jefferson, Therese
Preston, Alison
author_sort Jefferson, Therese
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description There are likely to be important gender differences in both the short and long term effects of economic downturns (ILO, 2009; Tutnjevic, 2002). Typically the differences are attributable to three contrasts between the working lives of men and women. Firstly, women are traditionally over represented in casualised workforce sectors that are relatively less regulated and susceptible to changes in working hours and employment conditions. Secondly, men and women are concentrated in different industries and occupations and therefore the gender effects of a change in economic conditions differ according to the effects on specific sectors of the economy. Thirdly, women in Australia and many other societies undertake a disproportionately large amount of unpaid household work. In this article we review official Australian data on women's employment, earnings and wealth immediately preceding and after September 2008. The data show that, while patterns of employment and earnings appear, superficially, to demonstrate that women are faring comparatively well there are also indications that there are serious short and long term challenges for women in the Australian labour market. This has serious implications for policy and for the growing number of men who are facing patterns of employment that were once more strongly associated with feminised workforces.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:17:55Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-43759
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:17:55Z
publishDate 2009
publisher Journal of Australian Political Economy
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-437592017-01-30T15:10:00Z Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis Jefferson, Therese Preston, Alison There are likely to be important gender differences in both the short and long term effects of economic downturns (ILO, 2009; Tutnjevic, 2002). Typically the differences are attributable to three contrasts between the working lives of men and women. Firstly, women are traditionally over represented in casualised workforce sectors that are relatively less regulated and susceptible to changes in working hours and employment conditions. Secondly, men and women are concentrated in different industries and occupations and therefore the gender effects of a change in economic conditions differ according to the effects on specific sectors of the economy. Thirdly, women in Australia and many other societies undertake a disproportionately large amount of unpaid household work. In this article we review official Australian data on women's employment, earnings and wealth immediately preceding and after September 2008. The data show that, while patterns of employment and earnings appear, superficially, to demonstrate that women are faring comparatively well there are also indications that there are serious short and long term challenges for women in the Australian labour market. This has serious implications for policy and for the growing number of men who are facing patterns of employment that were once more strongly associated with feminised workforces. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43759 http://australianpe.wix.com/japehome#!jape-64/c9yz Journal of Australian Political Economy restricted
spellingShingle Jefferson, Therese
Preston, Alison
Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title_full Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title_fullStr Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title_full_unstemmed Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title_short Women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
title_sort women's earnings security in a context of economic crisis
url http://australianpe.wix.com/japehome#!jape-64/c9yz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/43759