Current:Home > ContactIt's Equal Pay Day. The gender pay gap has hardly budged in 20 years. What gives? -WealthSync Hub
It's Equal Pay Day. The gender pay gap has hardly budged in 20 years. What gives?
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-08 06:45:00
Tuesday is Equal Pay Day: March 14th represents how far into the year women have had to work to catch up to what their male colleagues earned the previous year.
In other words, women have to work nearly 15 months to earn what men make in 12 months.
82 cents on the dollar, and less for women of color
This is usually referred to as the gender pay gap. Here are the numbers:
- Women earn about 82 cents for every dollar a man earns
- For Black women, it's about 65 cents
- For Latina women, it's about 60 cents
Those gaps widen when comparing what women of color earn to the salaries of White men. These numbers have basically not budged in 20 years. That's particularly strange because so many other things have changed:
- More women now graduate from college than men
- More women graduate from law school than men
- Medical school graduates are roughly half women
That should be seen as progress. So why hasn't the pay gap improved too?
Francine Blau, an economist at Cornell who has been studying the gender pay gap for decades, calls this the $64,000 question. "Although if you adjust for inflation, it's probably in the millions by now," she jokes.
The childcare conundrum
Blau says one of the biggest factors here is childcare. Many women shy away from really demanding positions or work only part time because they need time and flexibility to care for their kids.
"Women will choose jobs or switch to occupations or companies that are more family friendly," she explains. "But a lot of times those jobs will pay less."
Other women leave the workforce entirely. For every woman at a senior management level who gets promoted, two women leave their jobs, most citing childcare as a major reason.
The "unexplained pay gap"
Even if you account for things like women taking more flexible jobs, working fewer hours, taking time off for childcare, etc., paychecks between the sexes still aren't square. Blau and her research partner Lawrence Kahn controlled for "everything we could find reliable data on" and found that women still earn about 8% less than their male colleagues for the same job.
"It's what we call the 'unexplained pay gap,'" says Blau, then laughs. "Or, you could just call it discrimination."
Mend the gap?
One way women could narrow the unexplained pay gap is, of course, to negotiate for higher salaries. But Blau points out that women are likely to experience backlash when they ask for more money. And it can be hard to know how much their male colleagues make and, therefore, what to ask for.
That is changing: a handful of states now require salary ranges be included in job postings.
Blau says that information can be a game changer at work for women and other marginalized groups: "They can get a real sense of, 'Oh, this is the bottom of the range and this is the top of the range. What's reasonable to ask for?'"
A pay raise, if the data is any indication.
veryGood! (32)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Panera Bread drops caffeinated Charged Lemonade drinks after series of lawsuits
- Mary J. Blige asserts herself with Strength of a Woman: 'Allow me to reintroduce myself'
- Disney receives key approval to expand Southern California theme parks
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Police investigating shooting outside Drake’s mansion that left security guard wounded
- Justin Timberlake Reacts to Jessica Biel’s Over-the-Top Met Gala Gown
- US, Australian and Philippine forces sink a ship during war drills in the disputed South China Sea
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Mexico tightens travel rules on Peruvians in a show of visa diplomacy to slow migration to US
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Bucks' Patrick Beverley: 'I was absolutely wrong' for throwing basketball at Pacers fans
- You Missed Kim Kardashian's Bizarre Shoe Detail at 2024 Met Gala
- Official resigns after guilty plea to drug conspiracy in Mississippi and North Carolina vape shops
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Former GOP Senate candidate challenges House Republican who voted to impeach Trump
- Jurors should have considered stand-your-ground defense in sawed-off shotgun killing, judges rule
- Inside the courtroom where Trump was forced to listen to Stormy Daniels
Recommendation
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Nintendo hints at release date for its long-awaited Switch 2 video game console
New iPad Pro, Air unveiled: See prices, release dates, new features for Apple's latest devices
Semi-automatic gun ban nixed in Colorado’s Democratic-controlled statehouse after historic progress
Small twin
Russia plans tactical nuclear weapons drills near Ukraine border, citing provocative statements from NATO
Woman who used Target self-checkout to steal more than $60,000 of items convicted of theft
Missouri teen's Lyft ride to shot, kill 2 siblings then flee leads to arrest: Police