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White Wealthy Families Lead Population Growth in Manhattan
A Population Boom in Staten Island
Demand for English Lessons Outstrips Supply
More Than Half Of All Drivers Into Manhattan Are From The Boroughs (Not The Suburbs), And Other Surprising Traffic Facts Culled From Census Data
New York City, "Luxury Product" Or "Net Loser"?
Moving Toward 2030
Asian and Latina Suicide
Preparing For A Future With A Million More New Yorkers
Catosphere Demographics
US Census Bureau
American FactFinder
US/NYS Departments of Labor
by Nancy Foner
Murder in New York City
by Eric H. Monkkonen
Population History of New York City
by Ira Rosenwaike
Still the Promised City? : Afro-Americans and New Immigrants in Postindustrial New York
by Roger Waldinger
The New Race Question: How the Census Counts Multiracial Individuals
by Joel Perlmann and Mary Waters, editors
Women of New York City
by Andrew Beveridge
March, 2007
New York women are different, especially those who live in Manhattan. They are much more likely to be single, earn more money, and have more education than women living in the rest of the United States. And while the same percent of New York women are working as women elsewhere in the country, the jobs they are doing are much different. These are some of the significant results from an analysis of data from the 2005 Census.
About 45 percent of New York City women ages 25 to 64 ever married. In Manhattan, it’s just 37 percent. Elsewhere in the country, however, some 61 percent of women live with a spouse. Manhattan is one of the counties with the highest percent of those living on their own in the United States. Table 1 shows the proportion living with a spouse for men and women in two age ranges. As is plain from that table, those living in Manhattan and the outer boroughs follow a very different pattern than those in the rest of the United States.
Among those 25 to 64, while 63 percent of all Manhattan women have at least four years of college, slightly less than 30 percent of outer borough and other women in the United States have that level of educational achievement. When it comes to holding a job, 69 percent of Manhattan women, 60 percent of outer borough women, and 67 percent of women living elsewhere were working. When one looks at the type of jobs held by women in Manhattan compared to the rest of the United States the differences are striking. Though relatively small proportions, Manhattan women are much more likely to be actresses (about 14 times), authors(about 9 times); lawyers and judges (about 9 times), as well as dancers, photographers, stock and bond salesmen, psychologists, editors and reporters, architects, artists, economists, designers, physicians and surgeons and a range of other professions than in the rest of the United States.
Considering earnings, Table 2 present some information for women working full time in various occupations. In most occupations, men out-earn women. But this is especially true in Manhattan for law, medicine and stock and bonds salesmen. In each of these areas men out-earn women by more than two to one. Even the very high levels of education for Manhattan women do not wipe out this disparity. But female secretaries, designers and authors in Manhattan do earn more than men in those fields.
Other Related Articles:
Health Problems Among Caribbean Immigrants (2007-01-10)
Foreign, Battered and Denied Aid Unconstitutionally (2006-09-15)
Christine Quinn and Gay Rights in NYC (2006-01-05)
Women and Work in New York City (2005-04-18)
Murdering Women (2004-11-05)
New York City Is a Non-Voting Town (2004-08-11)
Yes, Welfare Workers Deserve Workforce Protection (2004-03-29)
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