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Transportation’s ‘pink tax’: Women spend more than men to get around
Passengers use a card to enter the newly-opened WTC Cortlandt subway station in New York on Saturday evening, Sept. 8, 2018. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison)
Passengers use a card to enter the newly-opened WTC Cortlandt subway station in New York on Saturday evening, Sept. 8, 2018. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison)

You’ve probably heard of the ‘pink tax’: it’s the extra 7% women pay for products and services, like razors and haircuts, geared towards them. According to a new survey by NYU’s Rudin Center for Transportation, women also routinely pay more to get around New York City.

According to the American Public Transportation Association (APTA), 55% of public transportation users are women. Their study found that 87% of all public transport trips directly affected the economy through work commutes or consumer spending trips. But as the NYU study found, women sometimes skip public transport for safety reasons.

Three-quarters of the survey’s 547 respondents reported that they had experienced harassment or theft while using public transport. Those real and perceived threats to their safety caused women to use services like Uber or Lyft, or take taxis. As a result, women pay roughly $26 to $50 more each month to take a car to their destination — all in the name of safety.

And men? Their extra costs each month amount to $0.

Sarah Kaufman, associate director for NYU’s Rudin Center for Transportation, and one of the study’s authors, points out that men will take cabs, or use ride sharing services like Uber and Lyft. But their primary reason for doing so isn’t safety.

“If they are taking a taxi, it’s about convenience and speed,” she said.

An old system

Caretakers suffered even more. Nationally, women make up 75% of caretakers of children and the elderly. The survey found that people who took frequent trips with their small children or elderly relatives tacked on more than $75 a month to skip public transport.

That’s not surprising to Mantill Williams, an APTA spokesman.

“When you compare us to other countries and nations, we are woefully behind modernizing,” he said. “We have a $90 billion backlog to bring them [transportation systems] up to be modernized for people today.”

In New York City alone, only a quarter of the stations have an elevator, which makes lugging a stroller or using a wheelchair that much more difficult.

A woman wheels a baby stroller onto a New Jersey Transit train at Penn Station in Newark, N.J., Thursday, July 15, 2004. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)
A woman wheels a baby stroller onto a New Jersey Transit train at Penn Station in Newark, N.J., Thursday, July 15, 2004. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)

“As a nation we haven’t made that a priority,” he explained. “If you have a stroller, you’re dealing with infrastructure that was built a 100 years ago and hasn’t been modernized.”

It’s worth noting, however, that many of the survey’s respondents are well educated (more than 50% had a master’s degree) and lived in the Upper West Side – and thus probably more affluent. Kaufman says this likely skewed data. As many New York commuters will know, just one trip from Manhattan to another borough can cost more than $26.

A widespread problem

More than three-quarters of respondents also identified as white. It’s unclear how women of color and/or lower-income tackle these issues.