Two thirds of the world's work is done by women, on average, and half of all the food produced in the world, although in many poor countries, women perform up to seventy percent or more of the work, and produce sixty percent of the food.
According to the Census Bureau, approximately 68% of women work full-time during their first pregnancy.
Generally it is about 0.5% of people will have some sort of epilepsy in their lifetime, so that would be the percentage for women.
In the 1970s, the percentage of women in the workforce in the United States was around 43%. This era marked a significant increase in women participating in the labor force compared to previous decades.
No. It can not be answered, because all negative studies are based on Black Americans. What good would be served to balance the reporting by listing other races? Not going to happen.
As of 2021, about 57% of self-identified Democrats in the U.S. are women.
As of 2020, around 57% of adult women are in the workforce in the United States. This percentage has been increasing steadily over the years as more women pursue education and career opportunities.
45%
100
yes
For women in the 19th century, the most common work for women was seamstress, childcare, housekeeper, cook, laundress.
70+ percent
they woked in movies and kinda jobs women have today. nanashi
The answer will depend on what exactly you are trying to measure:working women in the US as a percentage of women in the US,women working in the US as a percentage of women working in the world,working women in the US as a percentage of worker in the US.There are probably other possibilities.
There are many women in Rome that work outside of the home, and that number increases every year. Currently, approximately 42% of all Roman women hold jobs outside of their home.
According to the Census Bureau, approximately 68% of women work full-time during their first pregnancy.
Women were 6% of coal miners in the USA in 2013, according to National Mining Association statistics.
Women have always worked - running the home, raising children, etc. It's hard work, too. If you mean did women work outside the home in jobs for which they were paid, yes, they did. Teachers, doctors, lawyers, factory workers, cleaners, maids, cooks - all the jobs that women do today, although not in such great numbers as today.