Utterly fascinating.

I predict it will be vastly entertaining, as well as turbulent, watching
this trend play out in the various Indias over the next decade or so.
Already, the BPOs in Tier 3 towns are beginning to accelerate this
trend. Any other prominent examples the list can think of?

Udhay

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/07/the-end-of-men/8135/

The Atlantic Home
July/August 2010
The End of Men

Earlier this year, women became the majority of the workforce for the
first time in U.S. history. Most managers are now women too. And for
every two men who get a college degree this year, three women will do
the same. For years, women’s progress has been cast as a struggle for
equality. But what if equality isn’t the end point? What if modern,
postindustrial society is simply better suited to women? A report on the
unprecedented role reversal now under way— and its vast cultural
consequences
By Hanna Rosin

In the 1970s the biologist Ronald Ericsson came up with a way to
separate sperm carrying the male-producing Y chromosome from those
carrying the X. He sent the two kinds of sperm swimming down a glass
tube through ever-thicker albumin barriers. The sperm with the X
chromosome had a larger head and a longer tail, and so, he figured, they
would get bogged down in the viscous liquid. The sperm with the Y
chromosome were leaner and faster and could swim down to the bottom of
the tube more efficiently. Ericsson had grown up on a ranch in South
Dakota, where he’d developed an Old West, cowboy swagger. The process,
he said, was like “cutting out cattle at the gate.” The cattle left
flailing behind the gate were of course the X’s, which seemed to please
him. He would sometimes demonstrate the process using cartilage from a
bull’s penis as a pointer.

In the late 1970s, Ericsson leased the method to clinics around the
U.S., calling it the first scientifically proven method for choosing the
sex of a child. Instead of a lab coat, he wore cowboy boots and a cowboy
hat, and doled out his version of cowboy poetry. (People magazine once
suggested a TV miniseries based on his life called Cowboy in the Lab.)
The right prescription for life, he would say, was “breakfast at
five-thirty, on the saddle by six, no room for Mr. Limp Wrist.” In 1979,
he loaned out his ranch as the backdrop for the iconic “Marlboro
Country” ads because he believed in the campaign’s central image—“a guy
riding on his horse along the river, no bureaucrats, no lawyers,” he
recalled when I spoke to him this spring. “He’s the boss.” (The
photographers took some 6,500 pictures, a pictorial record of the
frontier that Ericsson still takes great pride in.)


Video: In this family feud, Hanna Rosin and her daughter, Noa, debate
the superiority of women with Rosin’s son, Jacob, and husband, Slate
editor David Plotz

Feminists of the era did not take kindly to Ericsson and his Marlboro
Man veneer. To them, the lab cowboy and his sperminator portended a
dystopia of mass-produced boys. “You have to be concerned about the
future of all women,” Roberta Steinbacher, a
nun-turned-social-psychologist, said in a 1984 People profile of
Ericsson. “There’s no question that there exists a universal preference
for sons.” Steinbacher went on to complain about women becoming locked
in as “second-class citizens” while men continued to dominate positions
of control and influence. “I think women have to ask themselves, ‘Where
does this stop?’” she said. “A lot of us wouldn’t be here right now if
these practices had been in effect years ago.”

Ericsson, now 74, laughed when I read him these quotes from his old
antagonist. Seldom has it been so easy to prove a dire prediction wrong.
In the ’90s, when Ericsson looked into the numbers for the two dozen or
so clinics that use his process, he discovered, to his surprise, that
couples were requesting more girls than boys, a gap that has persisted,
even though Ericsson advertises the method as more effective for
producing boys. In some clinics, Ericsson has said, the ratio is now as
high as 2 to 1. Polling data on American sex preference is sparse, and
does not show a clear preference for girls. But the picture from the
doctor’s office unambiguously does. A newer method for sperm selection,
called MicroSort, is currently completing Food and Drug Administration
clinical trials. The girl requests for that method run at about 75 percent.

Even more unsettling for Ericsson, it has become clear that in choosing
the sex of the next generation, he is no longer the boss. “It’s the
women who are driving all the decisions,” he says—a change the MicroSort
spokespeople I met with also mentioned. At first, Ericsson says, women
who called his clinics would apologize and shyly explain that they
already had two boys. “Now they just call and [say] outright, ‘I want a
girl.’ These mothers look at their lives and think their daughters will
have a bright future their mother and grandmother didn’t have, brighter
than their sons, even, so why wouldn’t you choose a girl?”

Why wouldn’t you choose a girl? That such a statement should be so
casually uttered by an old cowboy like Ericsson—or by anyone, for that
matter—is monumental. For nearly as long as civilization has existed,
patriarchy—enforced through the rights of the firstborn son—has been the
organizing principle, with few exceptions. Men in ancient Greece tied
off their left testicle in an effort to produce male heirs; women have
killed themselves (or been killed) for failing to bear sons. In her
iconic 1949 book, TheSecond Sex, the French feminist Simone de Beauvoir
suggested that women so detested their own “feminine condition” that
they regarded their newborn daughters with irritation and disgust. Now
the centuries-old preference for sons is eroding—or even reversing.
“Women of our generation want daughters precisely because we like who we
are,” breezes one woman in Cookie magazine. Even Ericsson, the stubborn
old goat, can sigh and mark the passing of an era. “Did male dominance
exist? Of course it existed. But it seems to be gone now. And the era of
the firstborn son is totally gone.”

Ericsson’s extended family is as good an illustration of the rapidly
shifting landscape as any other. His 26-year-old granddaughter—“tall,
slender, brighter than hell, with a take-no-prisoners personality”—is a
biochemist and works on genetic sequencing. His niece studied civil
engineering at the University of Southern California. His grandsons, he
says, are bright and handsome, but in school “their eyes glaze over. I
have to tell ’em: ‘Just don’t screw up and crash your pickup truck and
get some girl pregnant and ruin your life.’” Recently Ericsson joked
with the old boys at his elementary-school reunion that he was going to
have a sex-change operation. “Women live longer than men. They do better
in this economy. More of ’em graduate from college. They go into space
and do everything men do, and sometimes they do it a whole lot better. I
mean, hell, get out of the way—these females are going to leave us males
in the dust.”

Man has been the dominant sex since, well, the dawn of mankind. But for
the first time in human history, that is changing—and with shocking
speed. Cultural and economic changes always reinforce each other. And
the global economy is evolving in a way that is eroding the historical
preference for male children, worldwide. Over several centuries, South
Korea, for instance, constructed one of the most rigid patriarchal
societies in the world. Many wives who failed to produce male heirs were
abused and treated as domestic servants; some families prayed to spirits
to kill off girl children. Then, in the 1970s and ’80s, the government
embraced an industrial revolution and encouraged women to enter the
labor force. Women moved to the city and went to college. They advanced
rapidly, from industrial jobs to clerical jobs to professional work. The
traditional order began to crumble soon after. In 1990, the country’s
laws were revised so that women could keep custody of their children
after a divorce and inherit property. In 2005, the court ruled that
women could register children under their own names. As recently as
1985, about half of all women in a national survey said they “must have
a son.” That percentage fell slowly until 1991 and then plummeted to
just over 15 percent by 2003. Male preference in South Korea “is over,”
says Monica Das Gupta, a demographer and Asia expert at the World Bank.
“It happened so fast. It’s hard to believe it, but it is.” The same
shift is now beginning in other rapidly industrializing countries such
as India and China.

Up to a point, the reasons behind this shift are obvious. As thinking
and communicating have come to eclipse physical strength and stamina as
the keys to economic success, those societies that take advantage of the
talents of all their adults, not just half of them, have pulled away
from the rest. And because geopolitics and global culture are,
ultimately, Darwinian, other societies either follow suit or end up
marginalized. In 2006, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development devised the Gender, Institutions and Development Database,
which measures the economic and political power of women in 162
countries. With few exceptions, the greater the power of women, the
greater the country’s economic success. Aid agencies have started to
recognize this relationship and have pushed to institute political
quotas in about 100 countries, essentially forcing women into power in
an effort to improve those countries’ fortunes. In some war-torn states,
women are stepping in as a sort of maternal rescue team. Liberia’s
president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, portrayed her country as a sick child
in need of her care during her campaign five years ago. Postgenocide
Rwanda elected to heal itself by becoming the first country with a
majority of women in parliament.

In feminist circles, these social, political, and economic changes are
always cast as a slow, arduous form of catch-up in a continuing struggle
for female equality. But in the U.S., the world’s most advanced economy,
something much more remarkable seems to be happening. American parents
are beginning to choose to have girls over boys. As they imagine the
pride of watching a child grow and develop and succeed as an adult, it
is more often a girl that they see in their mind’s eye.

What if the modern, postindustrial economy is simply more congenial to
women than to men? For a long time, evolutionary psychologists have
claimed that we are all imprinted with adaptive imperatives from a
distant past: men are faster and stronger and hardwired to fight for
scarce resources, and that shows up now as a drive to win on Wall
Street; women are programmed to find good providers and to care for
their offspring, and that is manifested in more- nurturing and
more-flexible behavior, ordaining them to domesticity. This kind of
thinking frames our sense of the natural order. But what if men and
women were fulfilling not biological imperatives but social roles, based
on what was more efficient throughout a long era of human history? What
if that era has now come to an end? More to the point, what if the
economics of the new era are better suited to women?

Once you open your eyes to this possibility, the evidence is all around
you. It can be found, most immediately, in the wreckage of the Great
Recession, in which three-quarters of the 8 million jobs lost were lost
by men. The worst-hit industries were overwhelmingly male and deeply
identified with macho: construction, manufacturing, high finance. Some
of these jobs will come back, but the overall pattern of dislocation is
neither temporary nor random. The recession merely revealed—and
accelerated—a profound economic shift that has been going on for at
least 30 years, and in some respects even longer.

Earlier this year, for the first time in American history, the balance
of the workforce tipped toward women, who now hold a majority of the
nation’s jobs. The working class, which has long defined our notions of
masculinity, is slowly turning into a matriarchy, with men increasingly
absent from the home and women making all the decisions. Women dominate
today’s colleges and professional schools—for every two men who will
receive a B.A. this year, three women will do the same. Of the 15 job
categories projected to grow the most in the next decade in the U.S.,
all but two are occupied primarily by women. Indeed, the U.S. economy is
in some ways becoming a kind of traveling sisterhood: upper-class women
leave home and enter the workforce, creating domestic jobs for other
women to fill.

The postindustrial economy is indifferent to men’s size and strength.
The attributes that are most valuable today—social intelligence, open
communication, the ability to sit still and focus—are, at a minimum, not
predominantly male. In fact, the opposite may be true. Women in poor
parts of India are learning English faster than men to meet the demands
of new global call centers. Women own more than 40 percent of private
businesses in China, where a red Ferrari is the new status symbol for
female entrepreneurs. Last year, Iceland elected Prime Minister Johanna
Sigurdardottir, the world’s first openly lesbian head of state, who
campaigned explicitly against the male elite she claimed had destroyed
the nation’s banking system, and who vowed to end the “age of testosterone.”

Yes, the U.S. still has a wage gap, one that can be convincingly
explained—at least in part—by discrimination. Yes, women still do most
of the child care. And yes, the upper reaches of society are still
dominated by men. But given the power of the forces pushing at the
economy, this setup feels like the last gasp of a dying age rather than
the permanent establishment. Dozens of college women I interviewed for
this story assumed that they very well might be the ones working while
their husbands stayed at home, either looking for work or minding the
children. Guys, one senior remarked to me, “are the new ball and chain.”
It may be happening slowly and unevenly, but it’s unmistakably
happening: in the long view, the modern economy is becoming a place
where women hold the cards.

In his final book, The Bachelors’ Ball, published in 2007, the
sociologist Pierre Bourdieu describes the changing gender dynamics of
Béarn, the region in southwestern France where he grew up. The eldest
sons once held the privileges of patrimonial loyalty and filial
inheritance in Béarn. But over the decades, changing economic forces
turned those privileges into curses. Although the land no longer
produced the impressive income it once had, the men felt obligated to
tend it. Meanwhile, modern women shunned farm life, lured away by jobs
and adventure in the city. They occasionally returned for the
traditional balls, but the men who awaited them had lost their prestige
and become unmarriageable. This is the image that keeps recurring to me,
one that Bourdieu describes in his book: at the bachelors’ ball, the
men, self-conscious about their diminished status, stand stiffly, their
hands by their sides, as the women twirl away.

The role reversal that’s under way between American men and women shows
up most obviously and painfully in the working class. In recent years,
male support groups have sprung up throughout the Rust Belt and in other
places where the postindustrial economy has turned traditional family
roles upside down. Some groups help men cope with unemployment, and
others help them reconnect with their alienated families. Mustafaa
El-Scari, a teacher and social worker, leads some of these groups in
Kansas City. El-Scari has studied the sociology of men and boys set
adrift, and he considers it his special gift to get them to open up and
reflect on their new condition. The day I visited one of his classes,
earlier this year, he was facing a particularly resistant crowd.

None of the 30 or so men sitting in a classroom at a downtown Kansas
City school have come for voluntary adult enrichment. Having failed to
pay their child support, they were given the choice by a judge to go to
jail or attend a weekly class on fathering, which to them seemed the
better deal. This week’s lesson, from a workbook called Quenching the
Father Thirst, was supposed to involve writing a letter to a
hypothetical estranged 14-year-old daughter named Crystal, whose father
left her when she was a baby. But El-Scari has his own idea about how to
get through to this barely awake, skeptical crew, and letters to Crystal
have nothing to do with it.

Like them, he explains, he grew up watching Bill Cosby living behind his
metaphorical “white picket fence”—one man, one woman, and a bunch of
happy kids. “Well, that check bounced a long time ago,” he says. “Let’s
see,” he continues, reading from a worksheet. What are the four kinds of
paternal authority? Moral, emotional, social, and physical. “But you
ain’t none of those in that house. All you are is a paycheck, and now
you ain’t even that. And if you try to exercise your authority, she’ll
call 911. How does that make you feel? You’re supposed to be the
authority, and she says, ‘Get out of the house, bitch.’ She’s calling
you ‘bitch’!”

The men are black and white, their ages ranging from about 20 to 40. A
couple look like they might have spent a night or two on the streets,
but the rest look like they work, or used to. Now they have put down
their sodas, and El-Scari has their attention, so he gets a little more
philosophical. “Who’s doing what?” he asks them. “What is our role?
Everyone’s telling us we’re supposed to be the head of a nuclear family,
so you feel like you got robbed. It’s toxic, and poisonous, and it’s
setting us up for failure.” He writes on the board: $85,000. “This is
her salary.” Then: $12,000. “This is your salary. Who’s the damn man?
Who’s the man now?” A murmur rises. “That’s right. She’s the man.”

Judging by the men I spoke with afterward, El-Scari seemed to have
pegged his audience perfectly. Darren Henderson was making $33 an hour
laying sheet metal, until the real-estate crisis hit and he lost his
job. Then he lost his duplex—“there’s my little piece of the American
dream”—then his car. And then he fell behind on his child-support
payments. “They make it like I’m just sitting around,” he said, “but I’m
not.” As proof of his efforts, he took out a new commercial driver’s
permit and a bartending license, and then threw them down on the ground
like jokers, for all the use they’d been. His daughter’s mother had a
$50,000-a-year job and was getting her master’s degree in social work.
He’d just signed up for food stamps, which is just about the only
social-welfare program a man can easily access. Recently she’d seen him
waiting at the bus stop. “Looked me in the eye,” he recalled, “and just
drove on by.”

The men in that room, almost without exception, were casualties of the
end of the manufacturing era. Most of them had continued to work with
their hands even as demand for manual labor was declining. Since 2000,
manufacturing has lost almost 6 million jobs, more than a third of its
total workforce, and has taken in few young workers. The housing bubble
masked this new reality for a while, creating work in construction and
related industries. Many of the men I spoke with had worked as
electricians or builders; one had been a successful real-estate agent.
Now those jobs are gone too. Henderson spent his days shuttling between
unemployment offices and job interviews, wondering what his daughter
might be doing at any given moment. In 1950, roughly one in 20 men of
prime working age, like Henderson, was not working; today that ratio is
about one in five, the highest ever recorded.

Men dominate just two of the 15 job categories projected to grow the
most over the next decade: janitor and computer engineer. Women have
everything else—nursing, home health assistance, child care, food
preparation. Many of the new jobs, says Heather Boushey of the Center
for American Progress, “replace the things that women used to do in the
home for free.” None is especially high-paying. But the steady
accumulation of these jobs adds up to an economy that, for the working
class, has become more amenable to women than to men.

The list of growing jobs is heavy on nurturing professions, in which
women, ironically, seem to benefit from old stereotypes and habits.
Theoretically, there is no reason men should not be qualified. But they
have proved remarkably unable to adapt. Over the course of the past
century, feminism has pushed women to do things once considered against
their nature—first enter the workforce as singles, then continue to work
while married, then work even with small children at home. Many
professions that started out as the province of men are now filled
mostly with women—secretary and teacher come to mind. Yet I’m not aware
of any that have gone the opposite way. Nursing schools have tried hard
to recruit men in the past few years, with minimal success. Teaching
schools, eager to recruit male role models, are having a similarly hard
time. The range of acceptable masculine roles has changed comparatively
little, and has perhaps even narrowed as men have shied away from some
careers women have entered. As Jessica Grose wrote in Slate, men seem
“fixed in cultural aspic.” And with each passing day, they lag further
behind.

As we recover from the Great Recession, some traditionally male jobs
will return—men are almost always harder-hit than women in economic
downturns because construction and manufacturing are more cyclical than
service industries—but that won’t change the long-term trend. When we
look back on this period, argues Jamie Ladge, a business professor at
Northeastern University, we will see it as a “turning point for women in
the workforce.”

The economic and cultural power shift from men to women would be hugely
significant even if it never extended beyond working-class America. But
women are also starting to dominate middle management, and a surprising
number of professional careers as well. According to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, women now hold 51.4 percent of managerial and professional
jobs—up from 26.1 percent in 1980. They make up 54 percent of all
accountants and hold about half of all banking and insurance jobs. About
a third of America’s physicians are now women, as are 45 percent of
associates in law firms—and both those percentages are rising fast. A
white-collar economy values raw intellectual horsepower, which men and
women have in equal amounts. It also requires communication skills and
social intelligence, areas in which women, according to many studies,
have a slight edge. Perhaps most important—for better or worse—it
increasingly requires formal education credentials, which women are more
prone to acquire, particularly early in adulthood. Just about the only
professions in which women still make up a relatively small minority of
newly minted workers are engineering and those calling on a hard-science
background, and even in those areas, women have made strong gains since
the 1970s.

Office work has been steadily adapting to women—and in turn being
reshaped by them—for 30 years or more. Joel Garreau picks up on this
phenomenon in his 1991 book, Edge City, which explores the rise of
suburbs that are home to giant swaths of office space along with the
usual houses and malls. Companies began moving out of the city in search
not only of lower rent but also of the “best educated, most
conscientious, most stable workers.” They found their brightest
prospects among “underemployed females living in middle-class
communities on the fringe of the old urban areas.” As Garreau chronicles
the rise of suburban office parks, he places special emphasis on 1978,
the peak year for women entering the workforce. When brawn was off the
list of job requirements, women often measured up better than men. They
were smart, dutiful, and, as long as employers could make the jobs more
convenient for them, more reliable. The 1999 movie Office Space was
maybe the first to capture how alien and dispiriting the office park can
be for men. Disgusted by their jobs and their boss, Peter and his two
friends embezzle money and start sleeping through their alarm clocks. At
the movie’s end, a male co-worker burns down the office park, and Peter
abandons desk work for a job in construction.

Near the top of the jobs pyramid, of course, the upward march of women
stalls. Prominent female CEOs, past and present, are so rare that they
count as minor celebrities, and most of us can tick off their names just
from occasionally reading the business pages: Meg Whitman at eBay, Carly
Fiorina at Hewlett-Packard, Anne Mulcahy and Ursula Burns at Xerox,
Indra Nooyi at PepsiCo; the accomplishment is considered so
extraordinary that Whitman and Fiorina are using it as the basis for
political campaigns. Only 3 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs are women, and
the number has never risen much above that.

But even the way this issue is now framed reveals that men’s hold on
power in elite circles may be loosening. In business circles, the lack
of women at the top is described as a “brain drain” and a crisis of
“talent retention.” And while female CEOs may be rare in America’s
largest companies, they are highly prized: last year, they outearned
their male counterparts by 43 percent, on average, and received bigger
raises.

Even around the delicate question of working mothers, the terms of the
conversation are shifting. Last year, in a story about breast-feeding, I
complained about how the early years of child rearing keep women out of
power positions. But the term mommy track is slowly morphing into the
gender-neutral flex time, reflecting changes in the workforce. For
recent college graduates of both sexes, flexible arrangements are at the
top of the list of workplace demands, according to a study published
last year in the Harvard Business Review. And companies eager to attract
and retain talented workers and managers are responding. The consulting
firm Deloitte, for instance, started what’s now considered the model
program, called Mass Career Customization, which allows employees to
adjust their hours depending on their life stage. The program,
Deloitte’s Web site explains, solves “a complex issue—one that can no
longer be classified as a woman’s issue.”

“Women are knocking on the door of leadership at the very moment when
their talents are especially well matched with the requirements of the
day,” writes David Gergen in the introduction to Enlightened Power: How
Women Are Transforming the Practice of Leadership. What are these
talents? Once it was thought that leaders should be aggressive and
competitive, and that men are naturally more of both. But psychological
research has complicated this picture. In lab studies that simulate
negotiations, men and women are just about equally assertive and
competitive, with slight variations. Men tend to assert themselves in a
controlling manner, while women tend to take into account the rights of
others, but both styles are equally effective, write the psychologists
Alice Eagly and Linda Carli, in their 2007 book, Through the Labyrinth.

Over the years, researchers have sometimes exaggerated these differences
and described the particular talents of women in crude gender
stereotypes: women as more empathetic, as better consensus-seekers and
better lateral thinkers; women as bringing a superior moral sensibility
to bear on a cutthroat business world. In the ’90s, this field of
feminist business theory seemed to be forcing the point. But after the
latest financial crisis, these ideas have more resonance. Researchers
have started looking into the relationship between testosterone and
excessive risk, and wondering if groups of men, in some basic hormonal
way, spur each other to make reckless decisions. The picture emerging is
a mirror image of the traditional gender map: men and markets on the
side of the irrational and overemotional, and women on the side of the
cool and levelheaded.

We don’t yet know with certainty whether testosterone strongly
influences business decision-making. But the perception of the ideal
business leader is starting to shift. The old model of command and
control, with one leader holding all the decision-making power, is
considered hidebound. The new model is sometimes called “post-heroic,”
or “transformational” in the words of the historian and leadership
expert James MacGregor Burns. The aim is to behave like a good coach,
and channel your charisma to motivate others to be hardworking and
creative. The model is not explicitly defined as feminist, but it echoes
literature about male-female differences. A program at Columbia Business
School, for example, teaches sensitive leadership and social
intelligence, including better reading of facial expressions and body
language. “We never explicitly say, ‘Develop your feminine side,’ but
it’s clear that’s what we’re advocating,” says Jamie Ladge.

A 2008 study attempted to quantify the effect of this more-feminine
management style. Researchers at Columbia Business School and the
University of Maryland analyzed data on the top 1,500 U.S. companies
from 1992 to 2006 to determine the relationship between firm performance
and female participation in senior management. Firms that had women in
top positions performed better, and this was especially true if the firm
pursued what the researchers called an “innovation intensive strategy,”
in which, they argued, “creativity and collaboration may be especially
important”—an apt description of the future economy.

It could be that women boost corporate performance, or it could be that
better-performing firms have the luxury of recruiting and keeping
high-potential women. But the association is clear: innovative,
successful firms are the ones that promote women. The same
Columbia-Maryland study ranked America’s industries by the proportion of
firms that employed female executives, and the bottom of the list reads
like the ghosts of the economy past: shipbuilding, real estate, coal,
steelworks, machinery.

If you really want to see where the world is headed, of course, looking
at the current workforce can get you only so far. To see the future—of
the workforce, the economy, and the culture—you need to spend some time
at America’s colleges and professional schools, where a quiet revolution
is under way. More than ever, college is the gateway to economic
success, a necessary precondition for moving into the upper-middle
class—and increasingly even the middle class. It’s this broad, striving
middle class that defines our society. And demographically, we can see
with absolute clarity that in the coming decades the middle class will
be dominated by women.

We’ve all heard about the collegiate gender gap. But the implications of
that gap have not yet been fully digested. Women now earn 60 percent of
master’s degrees, about half of all law and medical degrees, and 42
percent of all M.B.A.s. Most important, women earn almost 60 percent of
all bachelor’s degrees—the minimum requirement, in most cases, for an
affluent life. In a stark reversal since the 1970s, men are now more
likely than women to hold only a high-school diploma. “One would think
that if men were acting in a rational way, they would be getting the
education they need to get along out there,” says Tom Mortenson, a
senior scholar at the Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in
Higher Education. “But they are just failing to adapt.”

This spring, I visited a few schools around Kansas City to get a feel
for the gender dynamics of higher education. I started at the downtown
campus of Metropolitan Community College. Metropolitan is the kind of
place where people go to learn practical job skills and keep current
with the changing economy, and as in most community colleges these days,
men were conspicuously absent. One afternoon, in the basement cafeteria
of a nearly windowless brick building, several women were trying to keep
their eyes on their biology textbook and ignore the text messages from
their babysitters. Another crew was outside the ladies’ room, braiding
each other’s hair. One woman, still in her medical-assistant scrubs,
looked like she was about to fall asleep in the elevator between the
first and fourth floors.

When Bernard Franklin took over as campus president in 2005, he looked
around and told his staff early on that their new priority was to
“recruit more boys.” He set up mentoring programs and men-only study
groups and student associations. He made a special effort to bond with
male students, who liked to call him “Suit.” “It upset some of my
feminists,” he recalls. Yet, a few years later, the tidal wave of women
continues to wash through the school—they now make up about 70 percent
of its students. They come to train to be nurses and teachers—African
American women, usually a few years older than traditional college
students, and lately, working-class white women from the suburbs seeking
a cheap way to earn a credential. As for the men? Well, little has
changed. “I recall one guy who was really smart,” one of the school’s
counselors told me. “But he was reading at a sixth-grade level and felt
embarrassed in front of the women. He had to hide his books from his
friends, who would tease him when he studied. Then came the excuses.
‘It’s spring, gotta play ball.’ ‘It’s winter, too cold.’ He didn’t make it.”

It makes some economic sense that women attend community colleges—and in
fact, all colleges—in greater numbers than men. Women ages 25 to 34 with
only a high-school diploma currently have a median income of $25,474,
while men in the same position earn $32,469. But it makes sense only up
to a point. The well-paid lifetime union job has been disappearing for
at least 30 years. Kansas City, for example, has shifted from steel
manufacturing to pharmaceuticals and information technologies. “The
economy isn’t as friendly to men as it once was,” says Jacqueline King,
of the American Council on Education. “You would think men and women
would go to these colleges at the same rate.” But they don’t.

In 2005, King’s group conducted a survey of lower-income adults in
college. Men, it turned out, had a harder time committing to school,
even when they desperately needed to retool. They tended to start out
behind academically, and many felt intimidated by the schoolwork. They
reported feeling isolated and were much worse at seeking out fellow
students, study groups, or counselors to help them adjust. Mothers going
back to school described themselves as good role models for their
children. Fathers worried that they were abrogating their
responsibilities as breadwinner.

The student gender gap started to feel like a crisis to some people in
higher-education circles in the mid-2000s, when it began showing up not
just in community and liberal-arts colleges but in the flagship public
universities—the UCs and the SUNYs and the UNCs. Like many of those
schools, the University of Missouri at Kansas City, a full research
university with more than 13,000 students, is now tipping toward 60
percent women, a level many admissions officers worry could permanently
shift the atmosphere and reputation of a school. In February, I visited
with Ashley Burress, UMKC’s student-body president. (The other three
student-government officers this school year were also women.) Burress,
a cute, short, African American 24-year-old grad student who is getting
a doctor-of-pharmacy degree, had many of the same complaints I heard
from other young women. Guys high-five each other when they get a C,
while girls beat themselves up over a B-minus. Guys play video games in
each other’s rooms, while girls crowd the study hall. Girls get their
degrees with no drama, while guys seem always in danger of drifting
away. “In 2012, I will be Dr. Burress,” she said. “Will I have to deal
with guys who don’t even have a bachelor’s degree? I would like to date,
but I’m putting myself in a really small pool.”

UMKC is a working- and middle-class school—the kind of place where
traditional sex roles might not be anathema. Yet as I talked to students
this spring, I realized how much the basic expectations for men and
women had shifted. Many of the women’s mothers had established their
careers later in life, sometimes after a divorce, and they had urged
their daughters to get to their own careers more quickly. They would be
a campus of Tracy Flicks, except that they seemed neither especially
brittle nor secretly falling apart.

Victoria, Michelle, and Erin are sorority sisters. Victoria’s mom is a
part-time bartender at a hotel. Victoria is a biology major and wants to
be a surgeon; soon she’ll apply to a bunch of medical schools. She
doesn’t want kids for a while, because she knows she’ll “be at the
hospital, like, 100 hours a week,” and when she does have kids, well,
she’ll “be the hotshot surgeon, and he”—a nameless he—“will be at home
playing with the kiddies.”

Michelle, a self-described “perfectionist,” also has her life mapped
out. She’s a psychology major and wants to be a family therapist. After
college, she will apply to grad school and look for internships. She is
well aware of the career-counseling resources on campus. And her fiancé?

    Michelle: He’s changed majors, like, 16 times. Last week he wanted
to be a dentist. This week it’s environmental science.

    Erin: Did he switch again this week? When you guys have kids, he’ll
definitely stay home. Seriously, what does he want to do?

    Michelle: It depends on the day of the week. Remember last year? It
was bio. It really is a joke. But it’s not. It’s funny, but it’s not.

Among traditional college students from the highest-income families, the
gender gap pretty much disappears. But the story is not so simple.
Wealthier students tend to go to elite private schools, and elite
private schools live by their own rules. Quietly, they’ve been opening
up a new frontier in affirmative action, with boys playing the role of
the underprivileged applicants needing an extra boost. In 2003, a study
by the economists Sandy Baum and Eban Goodstein found that among
selective liberal-arts schools, being male raises the chance of college
acceptance by 6.5 to 9 percentage points. Now the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights has voted to investigate what some academics have described
as the “open secret” that private schools “are discriminating in
admissions in order to maintain what they regard as an appropriate
gender balance.”

Jennifer Delahunty, the dean of admissions and financial aid at Kenyon
College, in Ohio, let this secret out in a 2006 New York Times op-ed.
Gender balance, she wrote back then, is the elephant in the room. And
today, she told me, the problem hasn’t gone away. A typical female
applicant, she said, manages the process herself—lines up the
interviews, sets up a campus visit, requests a visit with faculty
members. But the college has seen more than one male applicant “sit back
on the couch, sometimes with their eyes closed, while their mom tells
them where to go and what to do. Sometimes we say, ‘What a nice essay
his mom wrote,’” she said, in that funny-but-not vein.

To avoid crossing the dreaded 60 percent threshold, admissions officers
have created a language to explain away the boys’ deficits: “Brain
hasn’t kicked in yet.” “Slow to cook.” “Hasn’t quite peaked.” “Holistic
picture.” At times Delahunty has become so worried about “overeducated
females” and “undereducated males” that she jokes she is getting
conspiratorial. She once called her sister, a pediatrician, to vet her
latest theory: “Maybe these boys are genetically like canaries in a coal
mine, absorbing so many toxins and bad things in the environment that
their DNA is shifting. Maybe they’re like those frogs—they’re more
vulnerable or something, so they’ve gotten deformed.”

Clearly, some percentage of boys are just temperamentally unsuited to
college, at least at age 18 or 20, but without it, they have a harder
time finding their place these days. “Forty years ago, 30 years ago, if
you were one of the fairly constant fraction of boys who wasn’t ready to
learn in high school, there were ways for you to enter the mainstream
economy,” says Henry Farber, an economist at Princeton. “When you woke
up, there were jobs. There were good industrial jobs, so you could have
a good industrial, blue-collar career. Now those jobs are gone.”

Since the 1980s, as women have flooded colleges, male enrollment has
grown far more slowly. And the disparities start before college.
Throughout the ’90s, various authors and researchers agonized over why
boys seemed to be failing at every level of education, from elementary
school on up, and identified various culprits: a misguided feminism that
treated normal boys as incipient harassers (Christina Hoff Sommers);
different brain chemistry (Michael Gurian); a demanding, verbally
focused curriculum that ignored boys’ interests (Richard Whitmire). But
again, it’s not all that clear that boys have become more
dysfunctional—or have changed in any way. What’s clear is that schools,
like the economy, now value the self-control, focus, and verbal aptitude
that seem to come more easily to young girls.

Researchers have suggested any number of solutions. A movement is
growing for more all-boys schools and classes, and for respecting the
individual learning styles of boys. Some people think that boys should
be able to walk around in class, or take more time on tests, or have
tests and books that cater to their interests. In their desperation to
reach out to boys, some colleges have formed football teams and started
engineering programs. Most of these special accommodations sound very
much like the kind of affirmative action proposed for women over the
years—which in itself is an alarming flip.

Whether boys have changed or not, we are well past the time to start
trying some experiments. It is fabulous to see girls and young women
poised for success in the coming years. But allowing generations of boys
to grow up feeling rootless and obsolete is not a recipe for a peaceful
future. Men have few natural support groups and little access to social
welfare; the men’s-rights groups that do exist in the U.S. are taking on
an angry, antiwoman edge. Marriages fall apart or never happen at all,
and children are raised with no fathers. Far from being celebrated,
women’s rising power is perceived as a threat.

What would a society in which women are on top look like? We already
have an inkling. This is the first time that the cohort of Americans
ages 30 to 44 has more college-educated women than college-educated men,
and the effects are upsetting the traditional Cleaver-family dynamics.
In 1970, women contributed 2 to 6 percent of the family income. Now the
typical working wife brings home 42.2 percent, and four in 10
mothers—many of them single mothers—are the primary breadwinners in
their families. The whole question of whether mothers should work is
moot, argues Heather Boushey of the Center for American Progress,
“because they just do. This idealized family—he works, she stays
home—hardly exists anymore.”

The terms of marriage have changed radically since 1970. Typically,
women’s income has been the main factor in determining whether a family
moves up the class ladder or stays stagnant. And increasing numbers of
women—unable to find men with a similar income and education—are
forgoing marriage altogether. In 1970, 84 percent of women ages 30 to 44
were married; now 60 percent are. In 2007, among American women without
a high-school diploma, 43 percent were married. And yet, for all the
hand-wringing over the lonely spinster, the real loser in society—the
only one to have made just slight financial gains since the 1970s—is the
single man, whether poor or rich, college-educated or not. Hens rejoice;
it’s the bachelor party that’s over.

The sociologist Kathryn Edin spent five years talking with low-income
mothers in the inner suburbs of Philadelphia. Many of these
neighborhoods, she found, had turned into matriarchies, with women
making all the decisions and dictating what the men should and should
not do. “I think something feminists have missed,” Edin told me, “is how
much power women have” when they’re not bound by marriage. The women,
she explained, “make every important decision”—whether to have a baby,
how to raise it, where to live. “It’s definitely ‘my way or the
highway,’” she said. “Thirty years ago, cultural norms were such that
the fathers might have said, ‘Great, catch me if you can.’ Now they are
desperate to father, but they are pessimistic about whether they can
meet her expectations.” The women don’t want them as husbands, and they
have no steady income to provide. So what do they have?

“Nothing,” Edin says. “They have nothing. The men were just annihilated
in the recession of the ’90s, and things never got better. Now it’s just
awful.”

The situation today is not, as Edin likes to say, a “feminist nirvana.”
The phenomenon of children being born to unmarried parents “has spread
to barrios and trailer parks and rural areas and small towns,” Edin
says, and it is creeping up the class ladder. After staying steady for a
while, the portion of American children born to unmarried parents jumped
to 40 percent in the past few years. Many of their mothers are
struggling financially; the most successful are working and going to
school and hustling to feed the children, and then falling asleep in the
elevator of the community college.

Still, they are in charge. “The family changes over the past four
decades have been bad for men and bad for kids, but it’s not clear they
are bad for women,” says W. Bradford Wilcox, the head of the University
of Virginia’s National Marriage Project.

Over the years, researchers have proposed different theories to explain
the erosion of marriage in the lower classes: the rise of welfare, or
the disappearance of work and thus of marriageable men. But Edin thinks
the most compelling theory is that marriage has disappeared because
women are setting the terms—and setting them too high for the men around
them to reach. “I want that white-picket-fence dream,” one woman told
Edin, and the men she knew just didn’t measure up, so she had become her
own one-woman mother/father/nurturer/provider. The whole country’s
future could look much as the present does for many lower-class African
Americans: the mothers pull themselves up, but the men don’t follow.
First-generation college-educated white women may join their black
counterparts in a new kind of middle class, where marriage is
increasingly rare.

As the traditional order has been upended, signs of the profound
disruption have popped up in odd places. Japan is in a national panic
over the rise of the “herbivores,” the cohort of young men who are
rejecting the hard-drinking salaryman life of their fathers and are
instead gardening, organizing dessert parties, acting cartoonishly
feminine, and declining to have sex. The generational young-women
counterparts are known in Japan as the “carnivores,” or sometimes the
“hunters.”

American pop culture keeps producing endless variations on the omega
male, who ranks even below the beta in the wolf pack. This
often-unemployed, romantically challenged loser can show up as a
perpetual adolescent (in Judd Apatow’s Knocked Up or The 40-Year-Old
Virgin), or a charmless misanthrope (in Noah Baumbach’s Greenberg), or a
happy couch potato (in a Bud Light commercial). He can be sweet, bitter,
nostalgic, or cynical, but he cannot figure out how to be a man. “We
call each other ‘man,’” says Ben Stiller’s character in Greenberg, “but
it’s a joke. It’s like imitating other people.” The American male
novelist, meanwhile, has lost his mojo and entirely given up on sex as a
way for his characters to assert macho dominance, Katie Roiphe explains
in her essay “The Naked and the Conflicted.” Instead, she writes, “the
current sexual style is more childlike; innocence is more fashionable
than virility, the cuddle preferable to sex.”

At the same time, a new kind of alpha female has appeared, stirring up
anxiety and, occasionally, fear. The cougar trope started out as a joke
about desperate older women. Now it’s gone mainstream, even in
Hollywood, home to the 50-something producer with a starlet on his arm.
Susan Sarandon and Demi Moore have boy toys, and Aaron Johnson, the
19-year-old star of Kick-Ass, is a proud boy toy for a woman 24 years
his senior. The New York Times columnist Gail Collins recently wrote
that the cougar phenomenon is beginning to look like it’s not about
desperate women at all but about “desperate young American men who are
latching on to an older woman who’s a good earner.” Up in the Air, a
movie set against the backdrop of recession-era layoffs, hammers home
its point about the shattered ego of the American man. A character
played by George Clooney is called too old to be attractive by his
younger female colleague and is later rejected by an older woman whom he
falls in love with after she sleeps with him—and who turns out to be
married. George Clooney! If the sexiest man alive can get twice rejected
(and sexually played) in a movie, what hope is there for anyone else?
The message to American men is summarized by the title of a recent
offering from the romantic-comedy mill: She’s Out of My League.

In fact, the more women dominate, the more they behave, fittingly, like
the dominant sex. Rates of violence committed by middle-aged women have
skyrocketed since the 1980s, and no one knows why. High-profile female
killers have been showing up regularly in the news: Amy Bishop, the
homicidal Alabama professor; Jihad Jane and her sidekick, Jihad Jamie;
the latest generation of Black Widows, responsible for suicide bombings
in Russia. In Roman Polanski’s The Ghost Writer, the traditional
political wife is rewritten as a cold-blooded killer at the heart of an
evil conspiracy. In her recent video Telephone, Lady Gaga, with her
infallible radar for the cultural edge, rewrites Thelma and Louise as a
story not about elusive female empowerment but about sheer, ruthless
power. Instead of killing themselves, she and her girlfriend (played by
Beyoncé) kill a bad boyfriend and random others in a homicidal spree and
then escape in their yellow pickup truck, Gaga bragging, “We did it,
Honey B.”

The Marlboro Man, meanwhile, master of wild beast and wild country,
seems too far-fetched and preposterous even for advertising. His modern
equivalents are the stunted men in the Dodge Charger ad that ran during
this year’s Super Bowl in February. Of all the days in the year, one
might think, Super Bowl Sunday should be the one most dedicated to the
cinematic celebration of macho. The men in Super Bowl ads should be
throwing balls and racing motorcycles and doing whatever it is men
imagine they could do all day if only women were not around to restrain
them.

Instead, four men stare into the camera, unsmiling, not moving except
for tiny blinks and sways. They look like they’ve been tranquilized,
like they can barely hold themselves up against the breeze. Their lips
do not move, but a voice-over explains their predicament—how they’ve
been beaten silent by the demands of tedious employers and
enviro-fascists and women. Especially women. “I will put the seat down,
I will separate the recycling, I will carry your lip balm.” This last
one—lip balm—is expressed with the mildest spit of emotion, the only
hint of the suppressed rage against the dominatrix. Then the commercial
abruptly cuts to the fantasy, a Dodge Charger vrooming toward the camera
punctuated by bold all caps: MAN’S LAST STAND. But the motto is
unconvincing. After that display of muteness and passivity, you can only
imagine a woman—one with shiny lips—steering the beast.

This article available online at:

http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/07/the-end-of-men/8135/
Copyright © 2010 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All Rights Reserved.

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