A groundbreaking report is shedding new light on working women and women looking for work. The report, co-authored by NBC News special anchor Maria Shriver and the Center for American Progress, warns that millions of American women are at risk of falling into poverty.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 70% of Americans who are poor or are living on the brink of poverty are women and the children who count on them.
In some cases, the poorest women don’t have another adult to help make money. In May, the Pew Research Center found that one in four American families with kids under the age of 18 are headed by a single mom and 40.7 percent of the children born in America are born to unmarried women.
The Department of Labor reports that this is the first recovery since 1970 in which women have continued to lose jobs, not get hired.
One of the sectors that is hiring is fast food, and fast food workers these days aren’t just teenagers trying earning pocket money. 66% of fast food workers are women, according to the latest BLS statistics. The median age of women working in the fast food and service industries is 32. These are women making minimum, or just above minimum, wage. That’s $7.25 per hour.









