Folks: 

 

Apologies for cross-postings to those of you on the Feminist Approaches to
Bioethics listerv, as well.  

 

To all, below, please find the full text of an extraordinarily fascinating
article which pertains to the  effects of sex/gender differentials in
wage-earning to post-operative MTF and FTM transsexual persons. 

 

Best,

 Alison Reiheld 

 

Alison Reiheld

History, Philosophy, & Sociology of Science 

Lyman Briggs College 

Michigan State University 

Co-editor, Questions: Philosophy for Young People 

[log in to unmask]

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If Women Were More Like Men: Why Females Earn Less By John Cloud Friday,
Oct. 03, 2008 http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1847194,00.html


 

One of the oldest debates in contemporary social science is why women earn
less than men. Conservatives tend to argue that because women anticipate
taking time off to raise children, they have fewer incentives to work hard
in school, and they choose careers where on-the-job training and long hours
are less important. Liberals tend to focus on sex discrimination as the
explanation. Obviously some mixture of those factors is at work, but
academics have long been frustrated when they try to estimate which force is

greater: women's choices or men's discrimination. 

 

A new study looks at this problem in a wonderfully inventive way. In
previous studies, academics have looked at variables like years of education
and the effects of outside forces such as nondiscrimination policies. But
gender was always the constant. What if it didn't have to be? What if you
could construct an experiment in which a random sample of adults
unexpectedly changes sexes before work one day? Kristen Schilt, a
sociologist at the University of Chicago and Matthew Wiswall, an economist
at New York University, couldn't quite pull off that study. But they have
come up with the first systematic analysis of the experiences of transgender
people in the labor force. And what they found suggests that raw
discrimination remains potent in U.S. companies. 

 

Schilt and Wiswall found that women who become men (known as FTMs) do
significantly better than men who become women (MTFs). MTFs in the study
earned, on average, 32% less after they transitioned from male to female,
even after the authors controlled for factors like education levels. FTMs
earned an average of 1.5% more. The study was just published in the Berkeley
Electronic Press' peer-reviewed Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy. 

 

The men and women in the study had already gone to school and made their
career choices. Some of them changed jobs after they transitioned, and some
stayed in the same jobs. Some were out to their employers; others started
completely new lives as members of the opposite sex. Regardless, the overall
pattern was very clear: newly minted women were punished, and newly minted
men got a little bump-up in pay. 

 

Still, the paper is complex, so it's useful to step back first and look at
where the larger debate over the gender wage gap stands. After all, isn't
that gap narrowing to the point of obscurity? Actually, no. The Russell Sage
Foundation published the most authoritative work on the gender wage gap in
2006, The Declining Significance of Gender?. In the book, Francine Blau and
Lawrence Kahn, both Cornell economists, show that the average full-time
female worker in the U.S. earns about 79% of what the average full-time male
worker makes. Women employed full-time actually tend to have slightly more
education than men, but women are still more likely to work in clerical and
service jobs. Blau and Kahn say women do make different choices when they
decide on college majors and jobs   even highly educated women more often
choose "female" occupations that pay less   but the authors also note that
discrimination persists. As one example, they cite a 2000 study which found
that when symphony orchestras switched to blind auditions   those in which
the musicians play behind a screen   women had a significantly better chance
of being hired. 

 

The good news is that the gender wage gap has narrowed. In 1978, full-time
women workers earned just 61% of what full-time men did, compared to 79%
now. But what to make of the big difference in the experiences of those
transgenders who have become women versus those who have become men? Schilt,
one of the authors of the new article, interviewed a female-to-male
transgender attorney a few years ago. As a younger attorney, the lawyer had
been Susan; now he was Thomas. He told Schilt that after he transitioned
from female to male, another lawyer mistakenly believed that Susan had been
fired and replaced by Thomas. The other lawyer commended the firm's boss for
the replacement. He said Susan had been incompetent; "the new guy," he
added, was "just delightful." (Later, Ben Barres, an FTM neurobiology
professor at Stanford, told The Wall Street Journal of a similar experience.


An attendee at one of his lectures leaned over to a colleague and said, "Ben
Barres' work is much better than his sister's.") 

 

Such stories help explain an interesting feature of transgender life: men
who want to change outward gender wait an average of 10 years longer to
transition than women, according to the new article by Schilt and Wiswall. 

"MTFs attempt to preserve their male advantage at work for as long as
possible," they write, "whereas FTMs may seek to shed their female gender
identity more quickly." It should be noted that many transgender men do
experience discrimination, especially if they are short and if they don't
look convincingly male. Also, it's harder for MTFs to pass than FTMs: men
who become women still have large hands and bigger frames. The
less-convincing appearance of MTFs probably explains part of the reason they
earn so much less after they transition. Still, the new paper suggests an
entirely new vein of research in the field. It also suggests that if you're
thinking about changing sexes, you should carefully consider the economic
con