Maddy wrote:Libertarian666 wrote:
Apparently you have discovered a market anomaly: a profitable opportunity that no one is seizing.
In that case, you should have no trouble with the following plan, which will in fact be greatly aided by your gender.
Just open your own competing law firm, hiring women only, and pay them 90% as much as you would with males, instead of the 77% that they normally get. Since you hire only women, no one can (successfully) accuse you of sex discrimination. They get 90% as much as they would if they were male, which is 13% more than they would get anywhere else, so they'll be happy. And you will get 100% as much work as if they were male, so your company will be enormously profitable and will be able to grow as fast as you want. Win-win!

I think you misunderstand my point. I'm not suggesting that there is a market anomaly; only that "efficiency" within the realm of complex human interactions involves more than traditional measures of productivity. In most work settings, the ability to "play the game" is far more important than the ability to generate revenue. Because many women either don't understand the rules of the game or don't care to play it, their overall value to an enterprise, judged from the standpoint of the higher-ups (and likely by the clients they serve) tends to be discounted.
There's an interesting little book called "Games Your Mother Never Taught You." The main thesis is that men become acculturated very early on in life--through experiences such as team sports and military service--to the unspoken rules of the game, and that women typically go through their careers oblivious to the fact that those rules even exist.
In this sense, women fail, on the whole, to measure up.
It doesn't matter why women are underpaid, so long as they are underpaid. It doesn't matter whether everyone, or even very many people, can see that they are underpaid.
In fact, it doesn't matter who the group is that is underpaid. For an historical example, why were Jim Crow laws necessary? Because businessmen
wanted to hire blacks and had to be forced by the government not to do so. Are you claiming that discrimination against women is worse than the discrimination against Southern blacks that required the passage of Jim Crow laws?
If any identifiable group is
in fact underpaid, meaning that they generate more revenue per dollar of salary and expenses compared to another group, and there is no law that prevents people from hiring them, then all it takes is one entrepreneur to exploit that revenue-generating ability by paying them more than others would pay but less than the favored group (e.g., more than the oft-quoted "77%" but less than they would pay someone else (e.g., a man)), and generating outsized returns.
Since no one is doing this with women, that means that either:
1. No one can see this opportunity, or
2. The opportunity doesn't exist.
Only one of these is a possible explanation, given the fact that there are several people on this thread alone who claim they see the opportunity.