Female entrepreneurs are sometimes presumed to be more averse to business risk than their male counterparts. But advocates say a study showing their actually high tolerance of risk is helping to clear the air.
Female small business owners still don’t receive their mandated 5 percent of federal contracts. Now, these woman are banding together to voice their complaints, which they say they will take to the voting booths on Tuesday.
Even though 2003 was a year of economic recovery, it was not a good year for women. As the gender wage gap widened, the poverty rate for women and girls increased for the third straight year while more single-mother families were pulled into poverty.
As corporate scandals mount, socially responsible investment funds are doing well. In the past year, one fund that watches out for women’s workplace interests has outperformed those measured by a key stock-market gauge.
Women are still a tiny minority in the small-and-select world of venture-capital finance largely because of insufficient networks. But some women are trying to erase these boundaries and gain access to resources, knowledge and capital.
Both the Kerry and Bush campaigns are going after female business owners, a bloc that votes more, earns more and crosses party lines more often than other women.
Advocates are pushing for more generous work-leave policies for low-income women–a group that often needs it most, whether paid or unpaid, but is least likely to be entitled to it.
Minority women’s earnings lag not only those of men, but also those of other women, according to a study by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research. Authors hope the findings will fuel gender-pay policies that consider race and ethnicity.
More than $10 billion dollars is slated to repair the damage in lower Manhattan wrought by the attack of Sept. 11, 2001. With worker shortages in the construction trades, organizations are reaching out to women for the highly paid jobs.
Tax-cut policies–not aging baby boomers–are what really threaten Social Security and Medicare. That’s what many women’s groups argue and they are invoking last week’s annual reports by the trustees of both programs to bolster their case.
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