The Atlantic

Will Obama Fight to Close the Gender Gap?

A comprehensive report doesn't offer much in the way of solutions to the problems it flags

In the 1950s, Betty Friedan identified women's dissatisfaction as "the problem that has no name." In the Bush years, it became the problem that has no data. The administration eliminated a key equal employment survey that tracked advancement and wages by race and gender. At the time, women's organizations were outraged. How are we supposed to remedy a problem if we don't

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