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Surviving in this Tough Economy

By: Aubrey Moulton


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It can cause you a great deal of stress and exertion to work mulltiple jobs. The recession means that many people are jobless and many incomes are reduced. As a result, many people have had to take any job or jobs they can, which means that many individuals work at a variety of places to be able to enough money to get by.

Illustrating this point well is Mary Beth Sammons. She used to be the vp at an internet company and made $110,000 for a fifty hour work week but she lost that job so and she now holds down 2 part time jobs. For sixty hours of work she makes $50,000. Sammons said, “I laugh to my friends that I successfully learned how to chop my salary by more than half but Iam working longer.”

Sammons lost her job like scores of others but she was lucky enough to get sufficient work to pay most of her bills. Several are not as lucky. About 7 million Americans work two or more jobs, reports the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And many do it to get the bills paid or maintain their standard of living. The hours and work aren’t the only difficulty, they also have to attempt to equalize their personal and social lives as well.
Eileen Applebaum, a Rutgers University professor, stated that “Many more women than at any time in our history are either the primary or sole wage earner in their families. The disparate pay gap between men and women and the increased incidence of part-time work for women means that they are more likely to need more than 1 job just to make ends meet for their families.”

So now more than ever women are having to provide, and that means more women fighting for the employment in the sectors women generally dominate like education and health. Also, more women are looking for any employment they can get, since the recession caused the loss of high paying jobs in historically male sectors. This puts more stress on women to provide, and many need more than one position because they receive less than a male doing the same job.

A large-scale dilemma facing individuals with two jobs is that many don't recieve the benefits that may be included with full-time work. Women are in less prestigious careers that don’t tend to furnish health insurance or paid sick time so if anything happens they could easily be out of work. One nice thing about multiple jobs is that if people lose one, they will still bring in some income with the second employment. Then again, juggling several jobs can be particularly challenging and hectic for everyone.

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