I think there almost needs to be positive discrimination for women to make up for the years and years of positive discrimination for men.
Of course, everyone wants the best person for the job, BUT... most employers will recruit in their own image - I work for an airline which for years has been run by male ex-RAF pilots. It has gone through various mergers, but ultimately all the bosses have been the same. They actively go out to recruit their friends from the Air Force.
Men and women make equally good pilots, but for years women were considered to be not as good. They are told they need to be more confident, more pushy, more assertive. Even though many of them are confident and assertive but show it in a different way to men. They also need to over-state it to even be considered, however it is a fine line.
Airlines have in the main been run by men for years. I find it strange that holiday airlines are run by mainly men, despite the fact that half of their customers are women. Why would you want to employ mainly men?
So now there is a "push" to encourage more women to become airline pilots (not in the airline I work for). The reason is that people look for jobs which represent who they are. When all they see as pilots are middle aged ex-RAF men, they assume that women are not even allowed to be pilots! (Yes, even today!). This is the same in many professions.
I also do talks in schools, and huge numbers of children say that boys become airline pilots, and girls become cabin crew.
I think it is similar in medicine and law.
So I actually agree with a bit of a push in the other direction. We have to aim for 75% women in posts, then we have a change of addressing the huge gender disparity in so many professions.
The Gender Pay Gap makes for interesting reading - men controlled power in companies for many years, and after women started working, they still refused to give them the promotions, even though they were more than capable. Men controlled it by refusing to offer school hours or other flexible working.
Men are not 50% of stay at home parents. Why? I constantly read that the woman stayed at home because the man had the higher salary, so it made sense. But how does that make sense? Why are all the men paid more? Why can't they both work 50% part-time? Why are the majority of part-time jobs poorly paid and worked by women. Why do fathers not step up to their responsibilities? I also am always hearing how the man cannot ask for flexible working or reduced hours because "it will affect my career". Yet it is ok for the women?
Sorry for my rant!!