From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject Gender Wage Gap Persists in 2023
Date March 13, 2024 12:15 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[[link removed]]

GENDER WAGE GAP PERSISTS IN 2023  
[[link removed]]


 

Elise Gould
March 8, 2024
Economic Policy Institute
[[link removed]]


*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

_ March 12 is Equal Pay Day. The date represents how far into 2024
women would have to work on top of the hours they worked in 2023
simply to match what men were paid in 2023. _

,

 

Women Are Paid Roughly 22% Less Than Men On Average.

March 12 is Equal Pay Day, a reminder that there is still a
significant pay gap between men and women in our country. The date
represents how far into 2024 women would have to work on top of the
hours they worked in 2023 simply to match what men were paid in 2023.
Women were paid 21.8% less on average than men in 2023, after
controlling for race and ethnicity, education, age, and geographic
division.

There has been little progress in narrowing this gender wage gap over
the past three decades, as shown in Figure A. While the pay gap
declined between 1979 and 1994—due to men’s stagnant wages, not a
tremendous increase in women’s wages—it has remained mostly flat
since then.

The gender wage persists across the wage distribution

The experience of men and women across the wage distribution differs
considerably, but the gender wage gap persists no matter how it’s
measured. Women are paid less than men as a result of occupational
segregation, devaluation of women’s work, societal norms, and
discrimination, all of which took root well before women entered the
labor market.  Figure B shows that women are paid less than men at
all parts of the wage distribution.

The wage gap is smallest among lower-wage workers, in part due to the
minimum wage creating a wage floor. At the 10th percentile, women are
paid $1.86 less an hour, or 12.8% less than men, while at the middle
the wage gap is $3.87 an hour, or 14.9%. These low- and middle-wage
gaps translate into annual earnings gaps of over $3,800 and $8,000,
respectively, for a full-time worker. The 90th percentile is the
highest wage category we can compare due to issues with topcoding in
the data, which make it difficult to measure wages at the top of the
distribution, particularly for men. Women are paid $14.74 less an
hour, or 22.6% less, than men at the 90th percentile. That would
translate into an annual earnings gap of over $30,000 for a full-time
worker.

Women are paid less than men at every education level

Despite gains in educational attainment over the last five decades,
women still face a significant wage gap. Among workers, women are more
likely to graduate from college than men, and are more likely to
receive a graduate degree than men. Even so, women are paid less than
men at every education level, as shown in Figure C.

Among workers who have only a high school diploma, women are paid
21.3% less than men. Among workers who have a college degree, women
are paid 26.8% less than men. That gap of $13.52 on an hourly basis
translates to roughly $28,000 less annual earnings for a full-time
worker. Women with an advanced degree also experience a significant
the wage gap, at 25.2% in 2023. What’s very stark from the data is
that women with advanced degrees are paid less per hour, on average,
than men with college degrees. Men with a college degree only are paid
$50.37 per hour on average compared with $48.21 for women with an
advanced degree.

Black and Hispanic women experience the largest wage gaps

If the overall gender pay gap isn’t enough cause for alarm, the wage
gaps for Black and Hispanic women relative to white men are even
larger due to compounded discrimination and occupational segregation
based on both gender and race/ethnicity. In Figure D, we compare
middle wages—or the average hourly wage between the 40th and 60th
percentile of each group’s wage distribution—for white, Black,
Hispanic, and Asian American/Pacific Islander (AAPI) women with that
of white men.

White women and AAPI women are paid 83.1% and 90.3%, respectively, of
what non-Hispanic white men are paid at the middle. Black women are
paid only 69.8% of white men’s wages at the middle, a gap of $8.65
on an hourly basis which translates to roughly $18,000 less annual
earnings for a full-time worker. For Hispanic women, the gap is even
larger at the middle: Hispanic women are paid only 64.6% of white
men’s wages, an hourly wage gap of $10.15. For a full-time worker,
that gap is over $21,000 a year.

These pay gaps are even larger when examining average hourly wages for
all workers instead of just the average for middle-wage workers
because of the disproportionate share of highly paid workers who are
white men, which pulls up their average. Using the average measure,
Black and Hispanic women are paid 63.4% and 58.3%, respectively, of
white men’s wages, an hourly wage gap of $14.80 for Black women and
$16.90 for Hispanic women. Even when controlling for age, education,
and geographic division, Black and Hispanic women are both paid about
68% of white men’s wages. In other words, very little of the
observed difference in pay is explained by differences in education,
experience, or regional economic conditions.

Policymakers must pursue a range of options to close the gender pay
gap

There is no silver bullet to solving pay equity, but rather a menu of
policy options that can close not only the gender pay gap but also
gaps by race and ethnicity. These include requiring federal reporting
of pay by gender, race, and ethnicity; prohibiting employers from
asking about pay history; requiring employers to post pay bands when
hiring; and adequately staffing and funding the Equal Employment and
Opportunity Commission and other agencies charged with enforcement of
nondiscrimination laws.

We also need policies that lift wages for most workers while also
reducing gender and racial/ethnic pay gaps, such as running the
economy at full employment, raising the federal minimum wage, and
protecting and strengthening workers’ rights to bargain collectively
for higher wages and benefits.

===

* Gender Pay Gap; Women's Wages; Economic Policy Institute;
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

 

 

 

INTERPRET THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT

 

 

Submit via web
[[link removed]]

Submit via email
Frequently asked questions
[[link removed]]
Manage subscription
[[link removed]]
Visit xxxxxx.org
[[link removed]]

Twitter [[link removed]]

Facebook [[link removed]]

 




[link removed]

To unsubscribe, click the following link:
[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Portside
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • L-Soft LISTSERV