scorecard
  1. Home
  2. finance
  3. America needs to stop wasting billions of dollars on 'mansplaining' every year

America needs to stop wasting billions of dollars on 'mansplaining' every year

Shane Ferro   

America needs to stop wasting billions of dollars on 'mansplaining' every year
Finance1 min read

Mad Men, Don Draper

Michael Yarish/AMC

Mad Men is a television show about men explaining things to Peggy Olson

How much productivity is lost by men unnecessarily explaining things to women?

There's a phenomenon out there known as mansplaining - which The Atlantic's Lily Rothman describes as "explaining without regard to the fact that the explainee knows more than the explainer, often done by a man to a woman."

It's not the only kind of 'splaining (other popular forms are white-splaining and straight-splaining, concerning race and sexual orientation, respectively), but as a pure numbers game, it's probably the most prevalent.

There's been some pushback on the term. I'll concede that it's probably overused, but the fact is that the phenomenon exists (there's a whole book!).

When it happened to me this week, I started to wonder how much time is wasted by people explaining things to each other because they're too preoccupied to realize the person they're talking to is just as well-informed as them.

I estimated mansplaining, because it's what happens to me most often, but other 'splains could be substituted.

Let's do some back-of-the-envelope math!

  • There are 80 million men over the age of 20 (we'll give the kids a break) in the civilian population in the United States.
  • Let's say about 60% of them are mansplainers, based on anecdotal evidence.
  • The average mansplainer talks/types/tweets unnecessary things for 5 minutes a day, again based on anecdotal evidence.
  • Let's give the average worker a productivity of $70/hr (that's a raw GDP/hours worked estimate).
  • These are raw and possibly conservative numbers, but that gives $102 billion.
  • We'll have to double that to $204 billion, assuming that there's both a speaker and a listener in this equation.

That's over $200 billion that the economy loses every year!

Aren't you glad I spent this time 'splaining this to you?

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement