That's actually very simple to provide an answer to, and you pretty much supplied the answer on your own.Civil War Man wrote:That is certainly a factor, and should be accounted for. However, the article in the OP also cites the opposite happening when men took over a previously woman-dominated field. As more men became computer programmers, pay increased. In that case, either pay was increasing even though the labor pool was growing, which means that the size of the labor pool is not the sole factor (though other factors may not be related to sexism, like if increase in demand outstripped the increase in labor), or female programmers were leaving the field in such large numbers that the total labor pool was shrinking despite the influx of male programmers, which raises the question of why women would leave the field in such large numbers.Me2005 wrote:To me, this could actually point to a different, but still real, issue. As more women enter a field, there are more total qualified candidates to take jobs in that field then there were when just men were in it, so the workers in that field becomes less valuable. It seems possible that existing male workers continue to earn their old larger salaries, while new male and female workers earn less.
For the most part, people's salaries are not just arbitrary numbers. It is determined by supply and demand. Supply for labor and demand for. I am not going to pretend that this is the only factor, because it is not and there certainly is a significant amount of classism, nepotism, racism and sexism out there, no question about it. Ihave experienced my fair share of it.
Now, to answer your question regarding the transformation of the computer programmer career from female dominated to male dominated, we must explore several points.
1. Did labor demand increase? Increase in employer demand would place an upward pressure on wages, in contrast to the downward pressure that a increase in labor supply applies.
2. Did the scope of the job changed? From the description, It appears that a computer programmer back in the day was a menial and relatively low skill job.
3. Did women actually exit the field in such great numbers as you said? Or did the field itself grow?
There you go, explanations to why the salary of a field would change, no sexism needed.