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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, September 8, 2003

Increase in jobs seen for women

By Kristen Gerencher
CBS MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO — As the economy improves, so too will employment gains for women, job experts say.

Women already are attending law and medical school at nearly the same rate as men, and more of them are getting undergraduate degrees than their male counterparts.

In the workforce, women are most represented in retail sales, teaching, administration and nursing, according to the U.S. Labor Department. While healthcare is traditionally a female-dominated field, it stands to offer even more diverse opportunities in the years ahead as the population ages, economists said.

Among medical school graduates this year, 45.1 percent were women, up from 42.5 percent five years ago, according to a new report in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Computer, biotechnology and information technology jobs also will be in high demand, and tighter security since Sept. 11 means recruiters likely will target women to fill spots formerly filled by foreigners, said Linda Basch, executive director of the nonprofit National Council for Research on Women.

Information technology jobs make up six of what the Labor Department forecasts will be the 10 fastest growing occupations through 2010, said William Rodgers, a former chief economist for the department who now teaches economics at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va.

Despite IT companies' deep downsizing in recent years, demand for computer networking will continue to grow among both the service and manufacturing sectors, Rodgers said, which will force companies to recruit aggressively.

Such demand may offset discriminatory patterns of steering women away from technology-oriented jobs in schools, he said. "The economy should work to penalize those who discriminate. The market should fix itself. It becomes costlier to be a firm that has norms that are hostile or not as friendly to women or minorities."

For their part, women would be wise to take at least a few courses in computer science to round out their skills as the economy rebounds, he said.

Healthcare professions are expanding as well, with home-care aides and medical assistants also making the list of fastest growing professions, Rodgers said.

More women have been scooping up consulting jobs in the last few years that they once passed over because they required too much travel, said Deleise Lindsay, a managing consultant at Drake Beam Morin, an outplacement firm in Atlanta.

Traditionally, female job candidates preferred to be the stay-at-home spouse, but men have increasingly taken that role either out of choice or because of a job loss, Lindsay said. "Now they are home staying with the kids, which frees up the female to do these 90 percent travel jobs."

Working for themselves or as contractors holds unique appeal for women, she said. "There are more and more women going into the entrepreneurial ends because of the flexibility and funding opportunities and the support they have from the government."

Some fast-growing, high-paying nontraditional jobs for women include architects, detectives, inspectors, insulation workers and mechanics, Basch said. "One of the problems is going to be training women in these areas."

Younger women tend to have more access to training, she said, noting that the majority of women in nontraditional jobs — 55 percent — were under 30. A third were between 30 and 40, and just 8 percent were between 40 and 50.