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Men Gain 768,000 Jobs Since 2009, While Women Lose 218,000: Pew

Recovery

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 07/07/11 11:48 AM ET Updated: 09/06/11 06:12 AM ET

The recession, famously, hit men hard.

It was dubbed the "mancession," with male-dominated industries, like construction and manufacturing, among those shedding the most jobs. The gap in the unemployment rate between men and women grew to a 60-year high. Between December 2007 and June 2009, the official duration of the recession, 6.4 million jobs disappeared, and 74 percent of them were held by men.

Now, though, it's women who are losing out on the recovery. An extensive study from Pew Research, released Wednesday, shows that in the past two years, men have added 768,000 jobs, while women have lost 218,000.

In 15 out of 16 economic sectors, men have done better than women in the recovery. Since June 2009, there have been five sectors -- including finance, manufacturing, and the federal government -- where men gained jobs and women lost them. In five others -- among them education and health services, and leisure and hospitality -- men gained jobs at a faster rate than women. And in another five sectors, including construction, information, and local government, women lost jobs at a faster rate than men.

There was just one sector, state government, where women gained jobs while men lost them.

The findings of the Pew report may not come as a complete surprise to some. In January of this year, the economist Heather Boushey noted at Slate that men had far outpaced women in terms of 2010 job growth. "In total throughout 2010," Boushey wrote, "men gained slightly more than a million jobs, while women gained a paltry 149,000."

The Pew study observes that recoveries don't usually happen like this. In five periods of recovery since 1970, women either gained jobs faster than men or incurred fewer job losses. The report adds that the current recovery "is the first since 1970 in which women have lost jobs even as men have gained them," but that "it is not entirely clear why."

Since 2009, men have gained ground in a number of industries. For example, The Washington Post points out that men account for 39 percent of new jobs in health care and education since 2009, even though they'd only held about 23 percent of jobs in those sectors before the recovery.

Overall, according the the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the unemployment rate is currently 9.5 percent for men and 8.5 percent for women, similar to pre-recession rates, according to the Post. The national unemployment rate is 9.1 percent.

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The recession, famously, hit men hard. It was dubbed the "mancession," with male-dominated industries, like construction and manufacturing, among those shedding the most jobs. The gap in the unempl...
The recession, famously, hit men hard. It was dubbed the "mancession," with male-dominated industries, like construction and manufacturing, among those shedding the most jobs. The gap in the unempl...
 
 
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12:34 PM on 07/13/2011
Woman good, man bad.
12:00 PM on 07/10/2011
Bad title.

Men were concentrated in the fields that suffered disproportionately in the first years of the downturn. While some of those fields have picked up a bit, women are concentrated in areas that are now suffering - such as teaching.
11:10 PM on 07/08/2011
The most obvious thing about this article is it's desire to exploit tension between the sexes. They are trying to pit us against each other for no good reason. It's sad this kind of divisive nonsense is tolerated.
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demilieu
Texas liberal...with reservations
02:00 PM on 07/08/2011
The media is so capricious. They were calling this a 'mancession' till a short time back. Now things have flipped...
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Erinaleks
Architectural Artisan, Free Thinker
06:14 PM on 07/07/2011
Recovery??? According to who? Oh yes the sacred stock market. Why how of dumb of me. I also like how inflation is gaged. "not including the volatile energy and food sector"" blah blah blah. Huh, I stopped eating dirt after I was 6 years old! I mean what else is there after food and energy? Why focus on the unemployed? Why not say we have millions with jobs it's that volatile unemployment index that confuses people. Let me give an example. 400,000 new claims for unemployment this week. Ah ha, but what about the millions that didn't apply for new claims.
I missed calling as an economist or was it a massage therapist?
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AxelDC
05:02 PM on 07/07/2011
That's because we are laying off so many teachers, which is terrible for the long term prospects of US growth.
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Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
06:53 PM on 07/09/2011
you got that right!!!!! What are they thinking? don't get me started :(
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Rightlygay
Already EQUAL
03:42 PM on 07/07/2011
Everyone keeps telling me millions of jobs have been created......things just dont add up......
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signgrrl
typeface geek
04:57 PM on 07/07/2011
you noticed that too ?
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03:30 PM on 07/07/2011
Gives them more time to get back in the kitchen!!
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Dede Eagleburger
well behaved women rarely make History...
06:54 PM on 07/09/2011
and find some dishes and pots to throw at commenters like this :P
02:09 PM on 07/07/2011
wish I could figure a way to convince my wife to not be a stay-at-home mom and let me stay home instead ...
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
01:40 PM on 07/07/2011
"Men Have Accounted For Most Job Growth During Recovery'

Men have also accounted for 97% of the soldiers killed in the Iraq and Afghanistan. So what's your point?
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AxelDC
05:03 PM on 07/07/2011
That's because construction and manufacturing, two heavily male industries were hard hit. Goverments are laying off hordes of teachers now, which is a largely female profession.
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cadawa
01:22 PM on 07/07/2011
Men have 'done better in the recovery'? What recovery? The Wall Street/bankster recovery?
That has nothing to do with rebuilding the economy. That was a heist.
The women's job loss figures reflect the real economy. They are paying for fat cats sleight of hand. The monied elite couldn't get away with it without the press's willingness to call daylight robbery 'rebuilding the economy'.
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paddles
"pro" not "re" gressive
01:19 PM on 07/07/2011
Of course more men were laid off-corporations already had women doing the same job for far less pay, Now it's back to the old boys club.
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AxelDC
05:04 PM on 07/07/2011
No, women are losing their jobs because we are getting rid of teachers left and right. Rick Perry tried to lay off 20% of teachers in Texas alone.
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paddles
"pro" not "re" gressive
08:08 AM on 07/08/2011
Just saying that they had kept their job because their wages were lawyer. Agree with you about the teachers.
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TurnSeiki
Staunch Conservative
01:09 PM on 07/07/2011
Well, this report does have a silver lining. At least, to some extent, this helps refute the assumption that men have become lazy and complacent.
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Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
01:07 PM on 07/07/2011
Recovery....you call this a recovery?
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AxelDC
05:04 PM on 07/07/2011
GDP has recovered, the stock market has recovered, but corporations are hording their tax cuts and spending that money in Asia.
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PatrickforO
America needs a Labor Party
02:01 AM on 07/08/2011
Small and medium sized businesses right here in our home towns are not hiring because they are afraid health care costs will put them out of business. If we had a single payer healthcare system that was not tied to employment, we'd immediately unleash job creation to the tune of 250K - 300K monthly. Did you all notice that most Dems wanted single payer, but the GOP was invited to the table in good faith even after its leaders went on record saying that 'no progress is victory.' It is the GOP that pandered to their insurance company gods and left the national health plan tied to employment. Big mistake. Flawed law.
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Nosybear
Liar, damned liar and statistician
12:56 PM on 07/07/2011
Likely because they accounted for the largest portion of the job losses during the downturn. Got anything else from the Department of Duh this morning, Huffpo?