Female Activity Rate
CENSUS_ACTIVE_GEN:female/act * 100.0 / WORKING_AGE:female/total
Nationally, the proportion of women doing paid work has risen fairly steadily from
34% in 1931 to 64% in 2011; meanwhile, the same rate for men had dropped from 91%
to 75%, so the difference between the sexes has been greatly reduced.
One result is that the number of households with a single, usually
male 'breadwinner' has declined, and households with two people
working and with no-one working have both increased.
In 1931, the highest proportion of women were working in textile towns like Blackburn and
Burnley, both with 60% activity rates, and in inner London districts like Westminster
(55%), and Kensington and Chelsea (53%) -- in these areas both office work and domestic
servants were factors. Rural areas had typical rates around 20%, although this may
exclude farmers' wives working on family farms.
However, the very lowest rates were in mining communities, where miners expected
their relatively high wages to support the entire family:
in Blaenau Gwent and Easington, only 12% of women worked.
Over time, female activity rates have risen in almost all areas, but the most striking
transformation is of rural central England: almost universally, women now work except
for specific periods when they take time off to have children.