How women led the rise of professional work in the Australian economy

How women led the rise of professional work in the Australian economy

By Hannah Forsyth, Australian Catholic University

In the late-19th century, a very small percentage of Australians in the workforce around 3% worked in professional occupations like law, medicine, engineering, accounting and teaching. By the end of the 20th century, however, about 40% were professionals.

We are often told that women were excluded from this process. This leads to the impression that women lawyers, doctors and engineers are an artefact of progressive reform. But the story is more complicated than that.

My research shows that women were actually central to the growth of professional work. While professionals made up 2% of the male workforce in 1881, professionals were 5% of the female workforce. And while male professionals grew to 10% of the male labour force in the first half of the 20th century, professionals grew to 25% of women in the workforce in the same period.

In the first half of the 20th century all of the professions increased at a greater rate than the rest of the labour force. The economy was changing in ways that demanded more accountants, engineers and journalists. Scientific advances encouraged increased health care, and education of the whole population was increasingly necessary, requiring more teachers.

Not all the professions increased at the same rate, however, and the professions that grew the fastest were arguably those that contributed the most to the professionalisation of the economy.

These were not the traditional professions, such as law and medicine. Rather, as a result of increased expectations for scientific health care and the growth of compulsory schooling, nursing and teaching grew far more rapidly than all the others.

The rise of women professionals

There were women professionals in almost all fields — though women dominated in areas that drew on women’s traditional authority over what an older middle class defined as the ‘domestic sphere’.

Women had always worked. Work performed by both men and women once took place at or near the family home. Gradually, as work industrialised, it moved away from the home and into spaces dedicated to work. This occurred earlier for men than for women, which is the process that created a separate sphere, and left women in it.

But as the economy professionalised, middle-class women saw opportunities to build a professional sphere for themselves. Nursing and teaching drew on the work that women had always done – caring for the sick and teaching children.

For some women, this also gave them the authority to become medical practitioners. Women, not men, had traditional been responsibile for health care, the earliest women doctors argued.

Social work emerged from 19th-century charity work performed by middle-class women who were also determined to work outside the home.

Does this mean women were not disadvantaged after all?

Even though they had a significant place in building professional work, women were nevertheless disadvantaged. The new middle class that emerged with the growth of the professions was based on a hierarchy. Women always clustered at the bottom of that hierarchy.

When they carved out professional spaces for themselves, those professions were often the first — like nursing and teaching — to suffer cuts in pay and conditions.

Women medical practitioners often started their own hospitals, just so that they had opportunity to practise.

When new regulations clamped down on dentistry, the number of dentists reported in the census fell by 44% — but the decline in women dentists was 90%.

By 1947, only 77 women were dentists, down from 1,403 in 1921.

A similar thing happened later on to women accountants. During the Great Depression, women were also less likely to be granted opportunity to work in professional occupations. Some professions, such as teaching, instituted explicit ‘marriage bars’, that kept the number of women down.

How this helps us understand class

British historian E.P. Thompson once famously said that “class is a relationship, not a thing”. And like all relationships, this one’s complicated.

The hierarchy of the professional middle class is based at least nominally on merit. This helped middle-class people believe that they earned their status.

As the professions emerged, middle-class women objected that they did not have the same opportunities to earn a place in the hierarchies as middle-class men. There are many examples from the 1850s to the present. In 1911 for instance, a group of women published information about women professionals in order to complain about lack of opportunity for married women.

They were right, though women activists rarely pointed out that while most women were excluded from elite professions, so were most men. Middle-class women believed they deserved access to the professions because, like the men in those positions, they were middle class.

This helps us to see that gender equity was not just about opening up the professions to women on the basis of merit. Access to professional employment has always been about class background, as well as gender.

The ConversationWhen we are planning education and other programs, we need to remember that while merit supposedly regulates professional hierarchies, it is not the only thing at work. Making access to professional employment fair for everyone means we need to take class into account as well.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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