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BigmanPigman

(52,216 posts)
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 06:38 PM Sep 2022

Goodbye 'pink tax': California prohibits charging premiums for women's products

Goodbye 'pink tax': California prohibits charging premiums for women's products
https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/news/goodbye-pink-tax-california-prohibits-charging-premiums-for-womens-prod/

Goodbye ‘pink tax’: California prohibits charging premiums for women’s products.

"Women across California should no longer be forced to pay a premium when purchasing toiletries and other products, under a bill signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom Tuesday outlawing the so-called “pink tax.”Joined by members of the Legislative Women’s Caucus and his wife, Jennifer Seibel Newsom, the governor signed into law a package of bills intended to advance gender equity and protect the rights of women.

"AB 1287, authored by Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan, D-Orinda, prohibits companies from charging different prices for products based on the gender they’re marketed to — a practice referred to as the “pink tax.”Violations could cost companies thousands of dollars in fines.“These measures bring new transparency to tackle pay gaps, end discriminatory pricing of products based on gender and expand supports for survivors of abuse and assault,” Newsom said in a statement.

"A 2018 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that products pitched to women often cost more than similar versions marketed to men. In five out of 10 personal care categories for women, items such as deodorant and shaving cream designed for women cost significantly more than comparable products for men, the office reported. In only two categories, shaving gels and non-disposable razors, were the products more expensive for men. California now joins New York, which enacted a pink tax ban in 2020.The new law in the Golden State will still allow for some price disparities in gender-based products, but only when there is a significant differential in cost or length of manufacturing time.

“Governor Newsom’s actions to sign a diverse package of bills that are leading with a lens on equity will make a positive difference for women, children, and families across the state and ensures we are rebuilding a system that better values women and everything they bring to the table,” Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens), Chair of the California Legislative Women’s Caucus, said.One bill noticeably missing Newsom’s signature on Tuesday was SB 951, which would strengthen paid family leave benefits and make it more economically feasible for low-wage workers to take part in the program.

The bill, which the governor has until Friday to veto or sign, would require employers to provide workers with more compensation if they need to take time off to care for a new child. Specifically, it would increase the portion of a worker’s salary that an employer must cover from 70% to 90% for low-wage workers earning less than $57,000 a year and from 60% to 70% for all other eligible workers beginning on Jan. 1, 2025.“California is far behind other peer states and it should be leading,” Sonja Diaz, founding director of the UCLA Latino Politics and Policy Institute, said about the state’s paid family leave program. “Ultimately, not signing this bill means that those women and caregivers who are more affluent are going to continue to benefit on the backs of families that are facing severe economic precarity.”


**CA D rep Jackie Speir has been fighting for this for years!

Just last week I had to explain what the "pink tax" is to a checker at CVS. I brought her 2 Mitchum Deod, both the same size, the same ingredients, etc. Only difference was the fragrance in the one marketed for women as opposed to the scent for the man's brand, and the color was different. The male variety costs $1 less than the female variety.

This has pissed me off my entire life. All these little discriminations between genders that add up to one big FUCK YOU to the US markets' price gauging from women who are constantly ripped off right and left in the US.

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Mr.Bill

(24,764 posts)
1. I hope the law is worded in such a way
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 06:48 PM
Sep 2022

that they can't just raise the price of the men's product to comply. I want to see the price of the women's product to go down.

whathehell

(29,742 posts)
2. Good!
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 07:03 PM
Sep 2022

and thanks for posting..I honestly wasn't aware of this discrepancy in anything but.haircuts. which is something I tended to question. I understand your anger and will.definitely be checking out the situation in my own state of Ilinois.

whathehell

(29,742 posts)
7. Dry cleaning?...Amazing, but not in a good way
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 10:53 PM
Sep 2022

What reason, if any, is given for the discrepancy?..In hair salons they point out that women hair is usually longer.

niyad

(119,636 posts)
8. No real reason given for women's clothing being more expensive to dry clean.
Sat Oct 1, 2022, 08:50 AM
Oct 2022

As for the hair. . .a lot of men have long hair, and a lot of women short hair. The last time that I had my hair cut, there were twp men waiting whose hair was longer than mine. And the cutter did a lousy job on mine.

whathehell

(29,742 posts)
10. Then that is unacceptable.
Sat Oct 1, 2022, 09:19 AM
Oct 2022

The owners of the establishment need to be challenged on it...They need to provide a reason, and if there is no sound one, they need to be confronted on their unfaiir and, hopefully illegal practice.

whathehell

(29,742 posts)
12. I believe it, though I'd not noticed it before..
Sat Oct 1, 2022, 10:43 AM
Oct 2022

Definitely time for a change..Hopefully Gov. Newsom's action on the "Pink Tax' will get the ball rolling in other states.

MichMan

(13,071 posts)
4. I never understood why people would pay extra for a pink razor or shaving cream can
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 07:28 PM
Sep 2022

The products are identical other than color or packaging. Who cares what color a razor or a can of shaving foam is anyway? Just buy the cheaper one.

BigmanPigman

(52,216 posts)
6. Madison Ave. has been male dominated
Fri Sep 30, 2022, 09:22 PM
Sep 2022

since the 40s. They have the power/aka $$$ to decide what we see, eat, buy, think and have been for hundreds of years, in one form or another in the US. Their marketing was not even that clever. Just make and market products that "should" appeal to the average woman. Look at old Doris Day films. How could the greedy Madison Ave marketers' pass up such a golden opportunity? It worked so they kept going with the BS "female" products from aspirin to cold cream to deodorant. This is just the 1,000,001 way women have been ripped off and cheated by men since the dawn of time. They use female "weakness" to control us...and Madison Ave continues the disgusting injustice. This expands beyond tampons, why aren't they free? If men had periods you know they would not only get free tampons but they would also get a full paid week off each month from work, no questions asked. We also know that If men got pregnant there would be a 100% reversal of just about half of the laws in this country...to favor the poor, injured, rape victims (male of course).



niyad

(119,636 posts)
9. Recently when I went down the toilet paper aisle, there was a whole display
Sat Oct 1, 2022, 08:57 AM
Oct 2022

Last edited Sat Oct 1, 2022, 10:12 AM - Edit history (1)

of butt wipes for men, labelled, I kid you not, "dude wipes". Done up in very serious, dark packaging. I got some very funny looks because I was laughing so hard.

BigmanPigman

(52,216 posts)
13. I personally think this is one product that
Sat Oct 1, 2022, 06:13 PM
Oct 2022

men can definitely add to the male shopping list...they just have to package it with big, dark, muscles and lightening bolts and rockets going off into space with a dude in camouflage pants with a buxom 20 year old hugging him while clad in a wet t-shirt. Still, from what I have gathered in my lifetime even this type of marketing isn't enough to get some to care about their own hygiene as well as how it effects others...yuk!

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