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Gender pay gap

The gender pay gap or gender wage gap is the average difference between the remuneration for men and women who are working. Women are generally found to be paid less than men. There are two distinct numbers regarding the pay gap: non-adjusted versus adjusted pay gap. The latter typically takes into account differences in hours worked, occupations chosen, education and job experience.[1] In the United States, for example, the non-adjusted average woman's annual salary is 79% of the average man's salary, compared to 95% for the adjusted average salary.[2][3][4][5]

Activists demonstrate for Equal Pay Day in Frankfurt.

The reasons link to legal, social and economic factors, and extend beyond "equal pay for equal work".[6] The social factors include topics such as discrimination based on gender, the motherhood penalty vs. fatherhood bonus, parental leave, and gender norms. Additionally, the consequences of the gender pay gap surpass individual grievances, leading to reduced economic output, lower pensions for women, and fewer learning opportunities. The aforementioned causes and consequences of the gender pay gap will be further discussed in the duration of this page.

The gender pay gap can be a problem from a public policy perspective because it reduces economic output and means that women are more likely to be dependent upon welfare payments, especially in old age.[7][8][9]

Historical perspective

 
Women's weekly earnings as a percentage of men's in the U.S. by age, 1979-2005[10]

In 1963, women made only 59 cents per every dollar that their male counterpart earned. [11] Fast forward to 2016, and a woman working at a full-time position would still only make 79 cents per every dollar that a man earns.[11] Although there has been a notable increase in earnings for women's earnings compared to that of men, these projections show that the U.S. will not achieve pay equity till the year 2059, studies show.[12]

According to a 2021 study on historical gender wage ratios, women in Southern Europe earned approximately half that of unskilled men between 1300 and 1800. In Northern and Western Europe, the ratio was far higher but it declined over the period 1500–1800.[13]

A 2005 meta-analysis by Doris Weichselbaumer and Rudolf Winter-Ebmer of more than 260 published pay gap studies for over 60 countries found that, from the 1960s to the 1990s, raw (aka non-adjusted) wage differentials worldwide have fallen substantially from around 65% to 30%. The bulk of this decline, was due to better labor market endowments of women (i.e. better education, training, and work attachment).[14]

Another meta-analysis of 41 empirical studies on the wage gap performed in 1998 found a similar time trend in estimated pay gaps, a decrease of roughly 1% per year.[15]

A 2011 study by the British CMI concluded that if pay growth continues for female executives at current rates, the gap between the earnings of female and male executives would not be closed until 2109.[16]

Calculation

The non-adjusted gender pay gap or gender wage gap is typically the median or mean average difference between the remuneration for all working men and women in the sample chosen. It is usually represented as either a percentage or a ratio of the "difference between average gross hourly [or annual] earnings of male and female employees as % of male gross earnings".[17]

Some countries use only the full-time working population for the calculation of national gender gaps.[18][19] Others are based on a sample from the entire working population of a country (including part-time workers), in which case the full-time equivalent (FTE) is used to obtain the remuneration for an equal amount of paid hours worked.[17][20][21][22][23][24][19]

Non-governmental organizations apply the calculation to various samples. Some share how the calculation was performed and on which data set.[18] The gender pay gap can, for example, be measured by ethnicity,[25] by city,[26] by job,[27] or within a single organization.[28][29][30]

Adjusting for different causes

Comparing salary "within, rather than across" data sets helps to focus on a specific factor, by controlling for other factors. For example, to eliminate the role of horizontal and vertical segregation in the gender pay gap, salary can be compared by gender within a specific job function. To eliminate transnational differences in the job market, measurements can focus on a single geographic area instead.[27]

Causes

 
Decomposition of the gender wage gap (2010)

The non-adjusted gender pay gap is not itself a measure of discrimination. Rather, it combines differences in the average pay of women and men to serve as a barometer of comparison. Differences in pay are caused by occupational segregation (with more men in higher paid industries and women in lower paid industries), vertical segregation (fewer women in senior, and hence better paying positions), ineffective equal pay legislation, women's overall paid working hours, and barriers to entry into the labor market (such as education level and single parenting rate).[31]

Some variables that help explain the non-adjusted gender pay gap include economic activity, working time, and job tenure.[31] Gender-specific factors, including gender differences in qualifications and discrimination, overall wage structure, and the differences in remuneration across industry sectors all influence the gender pay gap.[32]

Industry sector

 
U.S. women's weekly earnings, employment, and percentage of men's earnings, by industry, 2009[33][34]

Occupational segregation[35] or horizontal segregation[36] refers to disparity in pay associated with occupational earnings.

A 2022 research study, conducted by Folbre et al., illustrates how the concentration of women in care occupations contributes significantly to the gender pay gap.[37] Their findings show that, while both women and men are affected by the care services wage penalties, women in these occupations face greater tribulations considering they are more likely to be employed in care services.[37] In Jacobs (1995), Boyd et al. refer to the horizontal division of labor as "high-tech" (predominantly men) versus "high-touch" (predominantly women) with high tech being more financially rewarding.[38] Men are more likely to be in relatively high-paying, dangerous industries such as mining, construction, or manufacturing and to be represented by a union.[39] Women, in contrast, are more likely to be in clerical jobs and to work in the service industry.[39]

A study of the US labor force in the 1990s suggested that gender differences in occupation, industry and union status explain an estimated 53% of the wage gap.[39] A 2017 study in the American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics found that the growing importance of the services sector has played a role in reducing the gender gap in pay and hours.[40] In 1998, adjusting for both differences in human capital and in industry, occupation, and unionism increases the size of American women's average earnings from 80% of American men's to 91%.[41]

A 2017 study by the US National Science Foundation's annual census revealed pay gaps in different areas of science: there is a much larger proportion of men in higher-paying fields such as mathematics and computer science, the two highest-paying scientific fields. Men accounted for about 75% of doctoral degrees in those fields (a proportion that has barely changed since 2007), and expected to earn $113,000 compared with $99,000 for women. In the social sciences the difference between men and women with PhD's was significantly smaller, with men earning ~$66,000, compared with $62,000 for women. However, in some fields women earn more: women in chemistry earn ~$85,000, about $5,000 more than their male colleagues.[42]

A Morningstar analysis[43] of senior executive pay data revealed that senior executive women earned 84.6 cents for every dollar earned by male executives in 2019.[44] Women also remained outnumbered in the C-Suite 7 to 1.[44]

Racial and gendered discrimination

Women experience the gender pay gap differently than one another, as do their wages. Women will earn more or less than another woman because of their race and/or ethnicity. According to the Joint Economic Committee, women of color are at a greater disadvantage than white women because they are more likely to hold jobs that "offer fewer hours and more likely to work part time involuntarily." [45] [46] However, "women of every racial and ethnic group earn less than men of the same group."[47] It is also important to note that women of a certain race are more similar in numbers than across races. For example, a Black woman earns around 90% of what a Black man does, yet a Black woman only makes 68% of what a white man does.[47]

A 2015 meta-analysis of studies of experimental simulations of employment found that "men were preferred for male-dominated jobs (i.e., gender-role congruity bias), whereas no strong preference for either gender was found for female-dominated or integrated jobs".[48] However, a meta-analysis of real-life correspondence experiments found that "men applying for strongly female-stereotyped jobs need to make between twice to three times as many applications as do women to receive a positive response for these jobs" and "women applying to male-dominated jobs face lower levels of discrimination in comparison to men applying to female-dominated jobs."[49] A 2018 systematic review of almost all correspondence experiments since 2005 found that most studies found that the evidence for gender discrimination "is very mixed", and that the amount of gender discrimination varies by occupation, though two studies found "a significant penalty for being pregnant or being a mother".[50] A 2018 audit study found that high-achieving men are called back more frequently by employers than equally high-achieving women (at a rate of nearly 2-to-1).[51]

In a 2016 interview, Harvard Economist Claudia Goldin argued that overt discrimination by employers was no longer a significant cause of the gender pay gap, and that the cause is instead more subtle cultural expectations which are a legacy of historical discrimination. According to Goldin, these expectations cause women, on average, to prioritize temporal flexibility, take different risks, and avoid situations of expected discrimination. She advocated educational reforms to address the remaining gender pay gap rather than mandates on business, arguing that the latter is simply too difficult to implement given the demands of the current business environment.[52]

A series of four studies from 2019 found that "even if these careers do not pay less, people assume that men will be less interested in any career that is majority female" and that this has "the potential to create a self-fulfilling prophecy in that people are also less interested in promoting pay raises in female-dominated caregiving careers ... yet if more men were to enter these occupations, the salaries in these fields might also rise".[53]

A 2021 study in Sweden on affirmative action found that "even though people’s attitudes tend to be quite negative when women are favored, they are even more negative when preferential treatment based on gender is offered to men".[54]

Parenthood and the Motherhood Penalty

Studies have shown that an increasing share of the gender pay gap over time is due to children.[55][56] The phenomenon of lower wages due to childbearing has been termed the motherhood penalty. In short, the motherhood penalty depicts the greater disadvantage mothers face as far as earning less wages than a childless woman.[57][58] According to a study conducted by the Joint Economic Committee, in 2014 mothers were shown to earn 3% less than childless women and 15% less than childless men.[57] Although it is true that the gender pay gap has narrowed, this phenomenon is essentially only significant for childless men and women.[58] Further, studies have shown that the motherhood penalty has been unwavering, rather than declining like the gender pay gap.[58]

The contribution of the motherhood penalty to the disparity in earnings between genders differs between countries; in Southern Europe, mothers earn more than childless women, in Nordic companies, mothers earn slightly less, in Continental Europe and Anglo-Saxon European countries, the difference is larger, and in Eastern Europe, a large part of the pay gap is due to motherhood.[59]

Traditionally, mothers leave the workforce temporarily to take care of their children. The length of parental leave of mothers affect the gender pay, shorter parental leave may lead women to leave the workplace, longer parental leaves can result in reduced wages of mothers, moderate leaves allow mothers to balance career and motherhood.[59]: 2  The availability of childcare can reduces the motherhood penalty as well as increasing workplace participation by mothers.[59]: 2 

Women tend to take lower paying jobs because they are more likely to have more flexible timings compared to higher-paying jobs. Since women are more likely to work fewer hours than men, they have less experience,[60] which will cause women to be behind in the work force. Mothers are more likely to work part-time.[59]: 3 

A 2019 study conducted in Germany found that women with children are discriminated against in the job market, whereas men with children are not.[61] In contrast, a 2020 study in the Netherlands found little evidence for discrimination against women in hiring based on their parental status.[62]

Another explanation of such gender pay gap is the distribution of housework. Couples who raise a child tend to designate the mother to do the larger share of housework and take on the main responsibility of childcare, and as a result, women tend to have less time available for wage-earning. This reinforces the pay gap between males and females in the labor market, and now people are trapped in this self-reinforcing cycle.[63]

Maternity leave in the United States

The United States maternity leave policy states that employees who have worked the necessary allotted hours are allowed a total of 12 weeks away from work, unpaid. However, these benefits are only regulated to employers who have more than 50 employees.[64] Smaller businesses or companies with less than 50 people are not required to provide leave for new mothers. While the 12 weeks are intended to be used after a mother gives birth or newly adopts, the time can also be used up if there are complications with the pregnancy that require them to miss work.[64] The 12 week unpaid policy in the U.S. is being expanded upon in a few states across the country. For example, New Jersey is now offering new mothers and their families the option to enroll in programs that allow them compensation while away from their job.[65] Now, mothers have a way secure income despite not working.

The introduction of a child to some American families results in 43% of new mothers in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) to face major career changes, varying from abandoning the workforce entirely to exchanging their careers in STEM for part-time work, or a career in another field.[66] While this is true for new mothers, some studies show that both new mothers and fathers report being affected by “flexibility stigma” in the workplace.[67] Flexibility stigma can be defined as the consequences imposed on workers for attempting to balance the responsibilities of their careers and families.[68] It has also been found that career-people of the STEM field with young children face more "work-family" conflict, as the demands of the rigorous STEM field and those of their young children overlap.[69]

Gender norms

Another social factor, which is related to the aforementioned one, is the socialization of individuals to adopt specific gender roles.[70][71] Job choices influenced by socialization are often slotted in to "demand-side" decisions in frameworks of wage discrimination,[72] rather than a result of extant labor market discrimination influencing job choice.[73] Men that are in non-traditional job roles or jobs that are primarily seen as a women-focused jobs, such as nursing, have high enough job satisfaction that motivates the men to continue in these job fields despite criticism they may receive.[74]

According to a 1998 study, in the eyes of some employees, women in middle management are perceived to lack the courage, leadership, and drive that male managers appear to have,[75] despite female middle managers achieving results on par with their male counterparts in terms of successful projects and achieving results for their employing companies.[75][failed verification] These perceptions, along with the factors previously described in the article, contribute to the difficulty of women to ascend to the executive ranks when compared to men in similar positions.[76]

Societal ideas of gender roles stem somewhat from media influences.[77] Media portrays ideals of gender-specific roles off of which gender stereotypes are built.[78] These stereotypes then translate to what types of work men and women can or should do.[77] In this way, gender plays a mediating role in work discrimination, and women find themselves in positions that do not allow for the same advancements as males.[77]

Some research suggests that women are more likely to volunteer for tasks that are less likely to help earn promotions, and that they are more likely to be asked to volunteer and more likely to say yes to such requests.[79]

Consequences

 
Female filmmakers protesting the gender pay gap and other inequalities in the film industry, during the 2018 Cannes Film Festival.

The gender pay gap can be a problem from a public policy perspective because it reduces economic output and means that women are more likely to be dependent upon welfare payments, especially in old age.[7][8][9]

For economic activity

A 2009 report for the Australian Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs argued that in addition to fairness and equity there are also strong economic imperatives for addressing the gender wage gap. The researchers estimated that a decrease in the gender wage gap from 17% to 16% would increase GDP per capita by approximately $260, mostly from an increase in the hours females would work. Ignoring opposing factors as hours females work increase, eliminating the whole gender wage gap from 17% could be worth around $93 billion or 8.5% of GDP. The researchers estimated the causes of the wage gap as follows, lack of work experience was 7%, lack of formal training was 5%, occupational segregation was 25%, working at smaller firms was 3%, and being female represented the remaining 60%.[80]

An October 2012 study by the American Association of University Women found that over the course of 47 years, an American woman with a college degree will make about $1.2 million less than a man with the same education.[81] Therefore, closing the pay gap by raising women's wages would have a stimulus effect that would grow the United States economy by at least 3% to 4%.[82][83]

For women's pensions

Considering women make less than men overall, they are also less likely to be eligible to participate in pension plans.[84] This is because pensions plans are generally calculated based on one's salary per year.[84] Further, this would require women to be employed in jobs that offer retirement plans, which they are less likely to be a part of than men.[84] The European Commission argues that the pay gap has significant effects on pensions. Since women's lifetime earnings are on average 17.5% (as of 2008) lower than men's, they have lower pensions. As a result, elderly women are more likely to face poverty: 22% of women aged 65 and over are at risk of poverty compared to 16% of men.[85]

For education and debt

Analysis conducted by the World Bank and available in the 2019 World Development Report on The Changing Nature of Work[86] connects earnings with skill accumulation, suggesting that women also accumulate less human capital (skills and knowledge) at work and through their careers. The report shows that the payoffs to work experience is lower for women across the world as compared to men. For example, in Venezuela, for each additional year of work, men's wages increase on average by 2.2 percent, compared to only 1.5 percent for women. In Denmark, by contrast, the payoffs to an additional year of work experience are the same for both men and women, at 5 percent on average. To address these differences, the report argues that governments could seek to remove limitations on the type or nature of work available to women and eliminate rules that limit women's property rights. Parental leave, nursing breaks, and the possibility for flexible or part-time schedules are also identified as potential factors limiting women's learning in the workplace.

Economic theories

Neoclassical models

In certain neoclassical models, discrimination by employers can be inefficient; excluding or limiting employment of a specific group will raise the wages of groups not facing discrimination. Other firms could then gain a competitive advantage by hiring more workers from the group facing discrimination. As a result, in the long run discrimination would not occur. However, this view depends on strong assumptions about the labor market and the production functions of the firms attempting to discriminate.[87] Firms which discriminate on the basis of real or perceived customer or employee preferences would also not necessarily see discrimination disappear in the long run even under stylized models.[88]

Monopsony explanation

In monopsony theory, which describes situations where there is only one buyer (in this case, a "buyer" for labor), wage discrimination can be explained by variations in labor mobility constraints between workers. Ransom and Oaxaca (2005) show that women appear to be less pay sensitive than men, and therefore employers take advantage of this and discriminate in their pay for women workers.[89]

Policy measures

Anti-discrimination legislation

According to the 2008 edition of the Employment Outlook report by the OECD, almost all OECD countries have established laws to combat discrimination on grounds of gender. Examples of this are the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[90] Legal prohibition of discriminatory behavior, however, can only be effective if it is enforced. The OECD points out that:

herein lies a major problem: in all OECD countries, enforcement essentially relies on the victims' willingness to assert their claims. But many people are not even aware of their legal rights regarding discrimination in the workplace. And even if they are, proving a discrimination claim is intrinsically difficult for the claimant and legal action in courts is a costly process, whose benefits down the road are often small and uncertain. All this discourages victims from lodging complaints.[91]

Moreover, although many OECD countries have put in place specialized anti-discrimination agencies, only in a few of them are these agencies effectively empowered, in the absence of individual complaints, to investigate companies, take actions against employers suspected of operating discriminatory practices, and sanction them when they find evidence of discrimination.[91][92]

In 2003, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) found that women in the United States, on average, earned 80% of what men earned in 2000 and workplace discrimination may be one contributing factor. In light of these findings, GAO examined the enforcement of anti-discrimination laws in the private and public sectors. In a 2008 report, GAO focused on the enforcement and outreach efforts of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Department of Labor (Labor). GAO found that EEOC does not fully monitor gender pay enforcement efforts and that Labor does not monitor enforcement trends and performance outcomes regarding gender pay or other specific areas of discrimination. GAO came to the conclusion that "federal agencies should better monitor their performance in enforcing anti-discrimination laws."[93][94]

In 2016, the EEOC proposed a rule to submit more information on employee wages by gender to better monitor and combat gender discrimination.[95] In 2018, Iceland enacted legislation to reduce the country's pay gap.[96]

Awareness campaigns

Civil society groups organize awareness campaigns that include activities such as Equal Pay Day or the equal pay for equal work movement to increase the public attention received by the gender pay gap. For the same reason, various groups publish regular reports on the current state of gender pay differences. An example is the Global Gender Gap Report.

Job flexibility

The growth of the "gig" economy generates worker flexibility that, some have speculated, will favor women.[97] However, the analysis of earnings among more than one million Uber drivers in the United States surprisingly showed that the gender pay gap between drivers is about 7% in favor of men. Uber's algorithm does not distinguish the gender of its workers, but men get more income because they choose better when and in which areas to work, and cancel and accept trips in a more lucrative way. Finally, men drive 2.2% faster than women, which also allows them to increase their income per unit of time.[97][98][99] The study concludes the "gig" economy can perpetuate the gender pay gap even in the absence of discrimination.[97][98][99]

In 2020, researchers from Stanford University used data from more than one million Uber drivers to show that, despite female drivers earning 7% less than male drivers, this difference was "entirely attributed to three factors: experience on the platform (...), preferences and constraints over where to work (...), and preferences for driving speed"; they noted that their results " suggest that there is no reason to expect the "gig" economy to close gender differences. Even in the absence of discrimination and in flexible labor markets, women's relatively high opportunity cost of non-paid-work time and gender-based differences in preferences and constraints can sustain a gender pay gap."[100][101][undue weight? ]

By country

This is a plot of non-adjusted pay gaps (median earnings of full-time employees) according to the OECD.

 
Gender pay gap of Employee in OECD countries[102]
 
Ratio of female to male salaries according to the Save the Children State of the World's Mothers report (2007 data). Each color along the spectrum from red to violet represents 5% of the average male pay.[103]

Moreover, the World Economic Forum provides data from 2015 that evaluates the gender pay gap in 145 countries. Their evaluations take into account economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment scores.[104]

Australia

In Australia, the Workplace Gender and Equality Agency (WGEA), an Australian Government statutory agency, publishes data from non-public sector Australian organizations. There is a pay gap across all industries.[105] The gender pay gap is calculated on the average weekly ordinary time earnings for full-time employees published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The gender pay gap excludes part-time earnings, casual earnings, and increased hourly rates for overtime.[106]

Australia has a persistent gender pay gap. Between 1990 and 2020, the gender pay gap remained within a range of between 13 and 19%.[107] In November 2020, the Australian gender pay gap was 13.4%.[108]

Ian Watson of Macquarie University examined the gender pay gap among full-time managers in Australia over the period 2001–2008, and found that between 65 and 90% of this earnings differential could not be explained by a large range of demographic and labor market variables. In fact, a "major part of the earnings gap is simply due to women managers being female". Watson also notes that despite the "characteristics of male and female managers being remarkably similar, their earnings are very different, suggesting that discrimination plays an important role in this outcome".[109] A 2009 report to the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs also found that "simply being a woman is the major contributing factor to the gap in Australia, accounting for 60 per cent of the difference between women's and men's earnings, a finding which reflects other Australian research in this area". The second most important factor in explaining the pay gap was industrial segregation.[80] A report by the World Bank also found that women in Australia who worked part-time jobs and were married came from households which had a gendered distribution of labor, possessed high job satisfaction, and hence were not motivated to increase their working hours.[110]

Brazil

The Global Gender Gap Report ranks Brazil at 95 out of 144 countries on pay equality for like jobs.[111] Brazil has a score of 0.684, which is a little below 2017's global index. In 2017, Brazil was one of the 6 countries that fully closed their gaps on both the Health and Survival and Educational Attainment sub-indexes. However, Brazil saw a setback in the progress towards gender parity this year, with its overall gender gap standing at its widest point since 2011. This is due to an exponential growth of Brazil's Political Empowerment gender gap, which measures the ratio of females in the parliament and at a ministerial level, that is too large to be counterbalanced by a range of modest improvements across the country's Economic Participation and Opportunity sub-index.[112]

According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, or IBGE, women in Brazil study more, work more and earn less than men. On average, combining paid work, household chores and caring for people, women work three hours a week more than men. In fact, the average women will work 54.4 hours a week, and the average man will only work 51.4 hours per week. Despite that, even with a higher educational level, women earn, on average, less than men do. Although the difference between men's and women's earnings has declined in recent years, in 2016 women still received the equivalent of 76.5% of men's earnings. One of the factors that may explain this difference is that only 37.8% of management positions in 2016 were held by women. According to IBGE, occupational segregation and the wage discrimination of women in the labor market also have an important role in the wage difference between men and women.[113] According to data from the Continuous National Household Sample Survey, done by IBGE on the fourth quarter of 2017, 24.3% of the 40.2 million Brazilian workers had completed college, but this proportion was of 14.6% among employed men. As reported by the same survey, women who work earn 24.4% less, on average, than men. It also cited that 6.0% of working men were employers, while the proportion of women employers was only 3.3%. The survey also pointed out that 92.3% of domestic workers, a job culturally known as "feminine" and that pays low wages, are women. While high paying occupations like civil construction employed 13% of the employed men and only 0.5% of the employed women.[114] Other reason that might explain the gender wage gap in Brazil are the very strict labor regulations that increase informal hiring. In Brazil, under law, female workers may opt to take 6 months of maternity leave that must be fully paid by the employer. Many researches are concerned with this regulations. They question if these regulations may actually force workers into informal jobs, where they will have no rights at all. In fact, women who work on informal jobs earn only 50% of the average women in formal jobs. Between men the difference is less radical: men working on informal jobs earn 60% of the average men in formal jobs.[115]

Canada

A study of wages among Canadian supply chain managers found that men make an average of $14,296 a year more than women.[116] The research suggests that as supply chain managers move up the corporate ladder, they are less likely to be female. Women in Canada are more likely to seek employment opportunities which greatly contrast the ones of men. About 20 percent of women between the ages of 25 and 54 will make just under $12 an hour in Canada. The demographic of women who take jobs paying less than $12 an hour is also a proportion that is twice as large as the proportion of men taking on the same type of low-wage work. There still remains the question of why such a trend seems to resonate throughout the developed world. One identified societal factor that has been identified is the influx of women of color and immigrants into the work force. These groups both tend to be subject to lower paying jobs from a statistical perspective.[117] Each province and territory in Canada has a quasi-constitutional human rights code which prohibits discrimination based on sex. Several also have laws specifically prohibiting public sector and private sector employers from paying men and women differing amounts for substantially similar work. Verbatim, the Alberta Human Rights Act states in regards to equal pay, "Where employees of both sexes perform the same or substantially similar work for an employer in an establishment the employer shall pay the employees at the same rate of pay."[118]

China

Using the gaps between men and women in economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment, The Global Gender Gap Report 2018 ranks China's gender gap at 110 out of 145 countries.[119] As an upper middle income country, as classified by the World Bank, China is the "third-least improved country in the world" on the gender gap. The health and survival sub-index is the lowest within the countries listed; this sub-index takes into account the gender differences of life expectancy and sex ratio at birth (the ratio of male to female children to depict the preferences of sons in accordance with China's One Child Policy).[120]: 4, 26  In particular, Jayoung Yoon, a researcher, claims the women's employment rate is decreasing. However, several of the contributing factors might be expected to increase women's participation. Yoon's contributing factors include: the traditional gender roles; the lack of childcare services provided by the state; the obstacle of child rearing; and the highly educated, unmarried women termed "leftover women" by the state. The term "leftover women" produces anxieties for women to rush marriage, delaying employment. In alignment with the traditional gender roles, the "Women Return to the Home" movement by the government encouraged women to leave their jobs to alleviate the men's unemployment rate.[121]

Dominican Republic

Dominican women, who are 52.2% of the labor force, earns an average of 20,479 Dominican pesos, 2.6% more than Dominican men's average income of 19,961 pesos.[122] The Global Gender Gap ranking, found by compiling economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment scores, in 2009 it was 67th out of 134 countries representing 90% of the globe, and its ranking has dropped to 86th out of 145 countries in 2015. More women are in ministerial offices, improving the political empowerment score, but women are not receiving equal pay for similar jobs, preserving the low economic participation and opportunity scores.[120]: 15–17, 23 [123]

European Union

 
Gender gap in average gross hourly earnings according to Eurostat 2014.[124]

At EU level, the gender pay gap is defined as the relative difference in the average gross hourly earnings of women and men within the economy as a whole. Eurostat found a persisting gender pay gap of 17.5% on average in the 27 EU Member States in 2008.[citation needed] There were considerable differences between the Member States, with the non-adjusted pay gap ranging from less than 10% in Italy, Slovenia, Malta, Romania, Belgium, Portugal, and Poland to more than 20% in Slovakia, the Netherlands, Czech Republic, Cyprus, Germany, United Kingdom, and Greece and more than 25% in Estonia and Austria.[124] However, taking into account the hours worked in Finland, men there only earned 0.4% more in net income than women.[125][126]

A recent survey of international employment law firms showed that gender pay gap reporting is not a common policy internationally. Despite such laws on a national level being few and far between, there are calls for regulation on an EU level. A recent (as of December 2015) resolution of the European Parliament urged the Commission to table legislation closing the pay gap. A proposal that is substantively the same as the UK plan was passed by 344 votes to 156 in the European Parliament.[127]

The European Commission has stated that the undervaluation of female work is one of the main contributors to the persisting gender pay gap.[128] They add that explanations of the pay gap goes beyond discrimination, and that other factors contributes in upholding the gap: factors such as work-life balance, the issue of women in leadership and the glass ceiling, and sectoral segregation, which has to do with the overrepresentation of women in low-paying sectors.[129]

Finland

On average, between 1995 and 2005, women in Finland earned 28.4% less in non-adjusted salaries than men.[125] Taking into account the high progressive tax rate in Finland, the net income difference was 22.7%.[125] Adjusted for the amount of hours worked (and not including unpaid national military service hours), these wage differences are reduced to approximately 5.7% (non taxed) and 0.4% (tax-adjusted).[125]

The difference in the amount of hours worked is largely attributed to social factors; for example, women in Finland spend considerably more time on domestic work instead.[125] Other considerable factors are increased pay rates for overtime and evening/night-time work, of which men in Finland, on average, work more.[125] When comparing people with the same job title, women in public sector positions earn approximately 99% of their male counterparts, while those in the private sector only earn 95%.[130] Public sector positions are generally more rigidly defined, allowing for less negotiation in individual wages and overtime/evening/night-time work.

As of 2018 Finland is ranked fourth and has fully closed gender gap on Educational Attainment and have closed more than 82% of its overall gender gap.[131]

Germany

Women earn 22–23% less than men, according to the Federal Statistical Office of Germany. The revised gender pay gap was 6–8% in the years 2006–2013.[132] The Cologne Institute for Economic Research adjusted the wage gap to less than 2%. They reduced the gender pay gap from 25% to 11% by taking in account the work hours, education and the period of employment. The difference in revenue was reduced furthermore if women had not paused their job for more than 18 months due to motherhood.[133][134]

The most significant factors associated with the remaining gender pay gap are part-time work, education and occupational segregation (less women in leading positions and in fields like STEM).[135]

In 2017, Germany passed the Transparency in Wage Structures Act, which requires larger employers to publish information about gender pay gaps and gives employees the right to information about their salary in comparison to members of the opposite gender.

Luxembourg

In Luxembourg, the total gender income gap represents 32.5%.[136] The gender pay gap of full-time workers regarding monthly gross wages has narrowed over the past few years. According to the data from OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) the gender pay gap dropped over 10% between 2002 and 2015.[137] The gap is also dependent on the age group. Females between the ages of 25–34 years are getting higher wages than males in this time period. One of the reasons for that is that they have a higher level of education during this age. From the age of 35 years males earn higher salaries than females.[138]

The current extent of gender pay gap refers to different factors such as varying working hours and diverse participation in the labor market.[139] More females (30.4%) than males (4.6%) are working part-time,[140] due to this fact the overall working hours for females are lowered.[136] The labor force participation represents 60.3% for females and 76% for males, because most women will take advantage of the maternity leave.[140] Males participate more often in higher paid jobs, for instance in executive positions (93.7%), what affects the scale of the gender pay gap as well.[136]

There is also a gender gap in vocational degree (12%) and apprentice training (3.4%) in Luxembourg.[141]

Netherlands

In the Netherlands, recent numbers from the CBS (Central Bureau voor statistieken; English: Central Bureau of Statistics) claim that the pay gap is getting smaller. Adjusted for occupation level, education level, experience level, and 17 other variables the difference in earnings in businesses has fallen from 9% (2008) to 7% (2014) and in government from 7% (2008) to 5% (2014). Without adjustments the gap is for businesses 20% (2014) and government 10% (2014). Young women earn more than men up until the age of 30, this is mostly due to a higher level of education. Women in the Netherlands, up until the age of 30, have a higher educational level on average than men; after this age men have on average a higher educational degree. The chance can also be caused by women getting pregnant and start taking part-time jobs so they can care for the children.[142]

India

For the year 2013, the gender pay gap in India was estimated to be 24.81%.[143] Further, while analyzing the level of female participation in the economy, a report slots India as one of the bottom 10 countries on its list. Thus, in addition to unequal pay, there is also unequal representation, because while women constitute almost half the Indian population (about 48% of the total), their representation in the work force amounts to only about one-fourth of the total.[144]

Japan

Jayoung Yoon analyzes Japan's culture of the traditional male breadwinner model, where the husband works outside of the house while the wife is the caretaker. Despite these traditional gender roles for women, Japan's government aims to enhance the economy by improving the labor policies for mothers with Abenomics, an economy revitalization strategy. Yoon believes Abenomics represents a desire to remedy the effects of an aging population rather than a desire to promote gender equality. Evidence for the conclusion is the finding that women are entering the workforce in contingent positions for a secondary income and a company need of part-time workers based on mechanizing, outsourcing and subcontracting. Therefore, Yoon states that women's participation rates do not seem to be influenced by government policies but by companies' necessities.[121] The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 said that Japan's economic participation and opportunity ranking (106th), 145th being the broadest gender gap, dropped from 2014 "due to lower wage equality for similar work and fewer female legislators, senior officials and managers".[120]: 25–27 

Jordan

From a total of 145 states, the World Economic Forum calculates Jordan's gender gap ranking for 2015 as 140th through economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment evaluations. Jordan is the "world's second-least improved country" for the overall gender gap.[120]: 25–27  The ranking dropped from 93rd in 2006.[123]: 9  In contradiction to Jordan's provisions within its constitution and being signatory to multiple conventions for improving the gender pay gap, there is no legislation aimed at gender equality in the workforce.[145] According to The Global Gender Gap Report 2015, Jordan had a score of 0.61; 1.00 being equality, on pay equality for like jobs.[120]: 25, 222 

Korea

As stated by Jayoung Yoon, South Korea's female employment rate has increased since the 1997 Asian financial crisis as a result of women 25 to 34 years old leaving the workforce later to become pregnant and women 45 to 49 years old returning to the workforce. Mothers are more likely to continue working after child rearing on account of the availability of affordable childcare services provided for mothers previously in the workforce or the difficulty to be rehired after taking time off to raise their children.[121] The World Economic Forum found that, in 2015, South Korea had a score of 0.55, 1.00 being equality, for pay equality for like jobs. From a total of 145 countries, South Korea had a gender gap ranking of 115th (the lower the ranking, the narrower the gender gap). On the other hand, political empowerment dropped to half of the percentage of women in the government in 2014.[120]: 26, 228 

In 2018, the gender wage gap in South Korea is of 34.6% and women earned about 65.4% of what men did on average, according to OECD data.[146] With regards to monthly earnings, including part-time jobs, the gender gap can be explained primarily by the fact that women work few hours than men, but occupation and industry segregation also pay an important role.[147] Korea is considered to have the worst wage gap among the industrialized countries.[148] This gap is often overlooked.[149] In addition, as many women leave the workplace once married or pregnant, the gender gap in pension entitlements is affected too, which in turn impacts the poverty level.[150]

North Korea, on the other hand, is one of few countries where women earn more than men. The disparity is due to women's greater participation in the shadow economy of North Korea.[151]

New Zealand

Although recent studies have shown that the gender wage gap in New Zealand has diminished in the last two decades, the gap continues to affect many women today. According to StatsNZ, the wage gap was measured to be 9.4 percent in September 2017. Back in 1998, it was measured to be approximately 16.3 percent. There are several different factors that affect New Zealand's wage gap. However, researchers claim that 80 percent of these factors cannot be elucidated, which often causes difficulty in understanding the gap.[152]

In order to calculate the gap, New Zealand makes use of several different methods. The official gap is calculated by Statistics New Zealand. They use the difference between men and women's hourly revenue. On the other hand, the State Services Commission examine the average income of men and women for their calculation.[152] Over the years, the OECD has and continues to track New Zealand's, along with 34 other countries', gender wage gap. In fact, the overall goal of the OECD is to fix the wage gap so that gender no longer plays a significant role in an individual's income.[153] Although it has been a gradual change, New Zealand is one of the countries that has seen notable progress and researchers have predicted that it will continue to do so.

Russia

A wage gap exists in Russia (after 1991, but also before) and statistical analysis shows that most of it cannot be explained by lower qualifications of women compared to men. On the other hand, occupational segregation by gender and labor market discrimination seem to account for a large share of it.[154][155][156][157][158][159]

The October Revolution (1917) and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, have shaped the developments in the gender wage gap. These two main turning points in the Russian history frame the analysis of Russia's gender pay gap found in the economic literature. Consequently, the pay gap study can be examined for two periods: the wage gap in Soviet Russia (1917–1991) and the wage gap in the transition and post-transition (after 1991).

Singapore

According to Jayoung Yoon, Singapore's aging population and low fertility rates are resulting in more women joining the labor force in response to the government's desire to improve the economy. The government provides tax relief to mothers in the workforce to encourage them to continue working. Yoon states that "as female employment increases, the gender gap in employment rates...narrows down" in Singapore.[121] The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 ranks Singapore's gender gap at 54th out of 145 states globally based on the economic participation and opportunity, the educational attainment, the health and survival, and the political empowerment sub-indexes (a lower rank means a smaller gender gap). The gender gap narrowed from 2014's ranking of 59. In the Asia and Pacific region, Singapore has evolved the most in the economic participation and opportunity sub-index, yet it is lower than the region's means in educational attainment and political empowerment.[120]: 25–27 

United Kingdom

In April 2018 the aggregate gender pay gap declined to 8.6%,[160] and even reversed for certain categories, e.g. with men in their 30s paid less than women for part-time work.[161] The gap varies considerably from −4.4% (women employed part-time without overtime out earn men) to 26% (for UK women employed full-time aged 50 – 59).[161] In 2012 the pay gap officially dropped below 10% for full-time workers.[162][163] The median pay, the point at which half of people earn more and half earn less, is 17.9% less for employed women than for employed men.[160]

The most significant factors associated with the gender pay gap are full-time/part-time work, education, the size of the firm a person is employed in, and occupational segregation (women are under-represented in managerial and high-paying professional occupations).[164] In part-time roles women out-earn men by 4.4% in 2018[160] (6.5% in 2015, 5.5% in 2014).[165] Women workers qualified to GCSE or A level standard, experienced a smaller pay gap in 2018. (Those qualified to degree level have seen little change).[160] A 2015 study compiled by the Press Association based on data from the Office for National Statistics revealed that women in their 20s were out-earning men in their 20s by an average of £1,111, showing a reversal of trends. However, the same study showed that men in their 30s out-earned women in their 30s by an average of £8,775. The study did not attempt to explain the causes of the gender gap.[166][needs update]

In October 2014, the UK Equality Act 2010 was augmented with regulations which require Employment Tribunals to order an employer (except an existing micro-business or a new business) to carry out an equal pay audit where the employer is found to have breached equal pay law.[167] The then prime minister David Cameron announced plans to require large firms to disclose data on the gender pay gap among staff.[168] Since April 2018, employers with over 250 employees are legally required to publish data relating to pay inequalities. Data published includes the pay and bonus figures between men and women, and includes data from April 2017.[169][170]

A BBC analysis of the figures after the deadline expired showed that more than three-quarters of UK companies pay men more on average than women.[171] Employment barrister Harini Iyengar advocates more flexible working and greater paternity leave to achieve economic and cultural change.[172]

United States

Retired footballer Brandi Chastain talking about the importance of equal pay regarding the U.S. women's national soccer team pay discrimination claim in 2019.

In the US, women's average annual salary has been estimated as 78%[173] to 82%[174] of that of men's average salary. Beyond overt discrimination, multiple studies explain the gender pay gap in terms of women's higher participation in part-time work and long-term absences from the labor market due to care responsibilities, among other factors.[175][176][177]

The extent to which discrimination plays a role in explaining gender wage disparities is somewhat difficult to quantify. A 2010 research review by the majority staff of the United States Congress Joint Economic Committee reported that studies have consistently found unexplained pay differences even after controlling for measurable factors that are assumed to influence earnings – suggestive of unknown/non-measurable contributing factors of which gender discrimination may be one.[178] Other studies have found direct evidence of discrimination – for example, more jobs went to women when the applicant's sex was unknown during the hiring process.[178]

See also

For other wage gaps

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Further reading

  • Altonji, Joseph G.; Blank, Rebecca (1999). "Chapter 48: Race and gender in the labor market". Handbook of Labor Economics. 3 (C): 3143–3259. doi:10.1016/S1573-4463(99)30039-0. ISSN 1573-4463.
  • Brown, Anna; Patten, Eileen (3 April 2017). "The Narrowing, But Persistent, Gender Gap in Pay". Washington, D.C.: Pew Research Center.

External links

gender, wage, disparity, redirects, here, other, wage, disparities, wage, gender, gender, wage, average, difference, between, remuneration, women, working, women, generally, found, paid, less, than, there, distinct, numbers, regarding, adjusted, versus, adjust. Wage disparity redirects here For other wage disparities see Wage gap The gender pay gap or gender wage gap is the average difference between the remuneration for men and women who are working Women are generally found to be paid less than men There are two distinct numbers regarding the pay gap non adjusted versus adjusted pay gap The latter typically takes into account differences in hours worked occupations chosen education and job experience 1 In the United States for example the non adjusted average woman s annual salary is 79 of the average man s salary compared to 95 for the adjusted average salary 2 3 4 5 source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Activists demonstrate for Equal Pay Day in Frankfurt The reasons link to legal social and economic factors and extend beyond equal pay for equal work 6 The social factors include topics such as discrimination based on gender the motherhood penalty vs fatherhood bonus parental leave and gender norms Additionally the consequences of the gender pay gap surpass individual grievances leading to reduced economic output lower pensions for women and fewer learning opportunities The aforementioned causes and consequences of the gender pay gap will be further discussed in the duration of this page The gender pay gap can be a problem from a public policy perspective because it reduces economic output and means that women are more likely to be dependent upon welfare payments especially in old age 7 8 9 Contents 1 Historical perspective 2 Calculation 2 1 Adjusting for different causes 3 Causes 3 1 Industry sector 3 2 Racial and gendered discrimination 3 3 Parenthood and the Motherhood Penalty 3 4 Maternity leave in the United States 3 5 Gender norms 4 Consequences 4 1 For economic activity 4 2 For women s pensions 4 3 For education and debt 5 Economic theories 5 1 Neoclassical models 5 2 Monopsony explanation 6 Policy measures 6 1 Anti discrimination legislation 6 2 Awareness campaigns 6 3 Job flexibility 7 By country 7 1 Australia 7 2 Brazil 7 3 Canada 7 4 China 7 5 Dominican Republic 7 6 European Union 7 6 1 Finland 7 6 2 Germany 7 6 3 Luxembourg 7 6 4 Netherlands 7 7 India 7 8 Japan 7 9 Jordan 7 10 Korea 7 11 New Zealand 7 12 Russia 7 13 Singapore 7 14 United Kingdom 7 15 United States 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistorical perspective Women s weekly earnings as a percentage of men s in the U S by age 1979 2005 10 In 1963 women made only 59 cents per every dollar that their male counterpart earned 11 Fast forward to 2016 and a woman working at a full time position would still only make 79 cents per every dollar that a man earns 11 Although there has been a notable increase in earnings for women s earnings compared to that of men these projections show that the U S will not achieve pay equity till the year 2059 studies show 12 According to a 2021 study on historical gender wage ratios women in Southern Europe earned approximately half that of unskilled men between 1300 and 1800 In Northern and Western Europe the ratio was far higher but it declined over the period 1500 1800 13 A 2005 meta analysis by Doris Weichselbaumer and Rudolf Winter Ebmer of more than 260 published pay gap studies for over 60 countries found that from the 1960s to the 1990s raw aka non adjusted wage differentials worldwide have fallen substantially from around 65 to 30 The bulk of this decline was due to better labor market endowments of women i e better education training and work attachment 14 Another meta analysis of 41 empirical studies on the wage gap performed in 1998 found a similar time trend in estimated pay gaps a decrease of roughly 1 per year 15 A 2011 study by the British CMI concluded that if pay growth continues for female executives at current rates the gap between the earnings of female and male executives would not be closed until 2109 16 CalculationThe non adjusted gender pay gap or gender wage gap is typically the median or mean average difference between the remuneration for all working men and women in the sample chosen It is usually represented as either a percentage or a ratio of the difference between average gross hourly or annual earnings of male and female employees as of male gross earnings 17 Some countries use only the full time working population for the calculation of national gender gaps 18 19 Others are based on a sample from the entire working population of a country including part time workers in which case the full time equivalent FTE is used to obtain the remuneration for an equal amount of paid hours worked 17 20 21 22 23 24 19 Non governmental organizations apply the calculation to various samples Some share how the calculation was performed and on which data set 18 The gender pay gap can for example be measured by ethnicity 25 by city 26 by job 27 or within a single organization 28 29 30 Adjusting for different causes Comparing salary within rather than across data sets helps to focus on a specific factor by controlling for other factors For example to eliminate the role of horizontal and vertical segregation in the gender pay gap salary can be compared by gender within a specific job function To eliminate transnational differences in the job market measurements can focus on a single geographic area instead 27 Causes Decomposition of the gender wage gap 2010 The non adjusted gender pay gap is not itself a measure of discrimination Rather it combines differences in the average pay of women and men to serve as a barometer of comparison Differences in pay are caused by occupational segregation with more men in higher paid industries and women in lower paid industries vertical segregation fewer women in senior and hence better paying positions ineffective equal pay legislation women s overall paid working hours and barriers to entry into the labor market such as education level and single parenting rate 31 Some variables that help explain the non adjusted gender pay gap include economic activity working time and job tenure 31 Gender specific factors including gender differences in qualifications and discrimination overall wage structure and the differences in remuneration across industry sectors all influence the gender pay gap 32 Industry sector U S women s weekly earnings employment and percentage of men s earnings by industry 2009 33 34 Occupational segregation 35 or horizontal segregation 36 refers to disparity in pay associated with occupational earnings A 2022 research study conducted by Folbre et al illustrates how the concentration of women in care occupations contributes significantly to the gender pay gap 37 Their findings show that while both women and men are affected by the care services wage penalties women in these occupations face greater tribulations considering they are more likely to be employed in care services 37 In Jacobs 1995 Boyd et al refer to the horizontal division of labor as high tech predominantly men versus high touch predominantly women with high tech being more financially rewarding 38 Men are more likely to be in relatively high paying dangerous industries such as mining construction or manufacturing and to be represented by a union 39 Women in contrast are more likely to be in clerical jobs and to work in the service industry 39 A study of the US labor force in the 1990s suggested that gender differences in occupation industry and union status explain an estimated 53 of the wage gap 39 A 2017 study in the American Economic Journal Macroeconomics found that the growing importance of the services sector has played a role in reducing the gender gap in pay and hours 40 In 1998 adjusting for both differences in human capital and in industry occupation and unionism increases the size of American women s average earnings from 80 of American men s to 91 41 A 2017 study by the US National Science Foundation s annual census revealed pay gaps in different areas of science there is a much larger proportion of men in higher paying fields such as mathematics and computer science the two highest paying scientific fields Men accounted for about 75 of doctoral degrees in those fields a proportion that has barely changed since 2007 and expected to earn 113 000 compared with 99 000 for women In the social sciences the difference between men and women with PhD s was significantly smaller with men earning 66 000 compared with 62 000 for women However in some fields women earn more women in chemistry earn 85 000 about 5 000 more than their male colleagues 42 A Morningstar analysis 43 of senior executive pay data revealed that senior executive women earned 84 6 cents for every dollar earned by male executives in 2019 44 Women also remained outnumbered in the C Suite 7 to 1 44 Racial and gendered discrimination Women experience the gender pay gap differently than one another as do their wages Women will earn more or less than another woman because of their race and or ethnicity According to the Joint Economic Committee women of color are at a greater disadvantage than white women because they are more likely to hold jobs that offer fewer hours and more likely to work part time involuntarily 45 46 However women of every racial and ethnic group earn less than men of the same group 47 It is also important to note that women of a certain race are more similar in numbers than across races For example a Black woman earns around 90 of what a Black man does yet a Black woman only makes 68 of what a white man does 47 A 2015 meta analysis of studies of experimental simulations of employment found that men were preferred for male dominated jobs i e gender role congruity bias whereas no strong preference for either gender was found for female dominated or integrated jobs 48 However a meta analysis of real life correspondence experiments found that men applying for strongly female stereotyped jobs need to make between twice to three times as many applications as do women to receive a positive response for these jobs and women applying to male dominated jobs face lower levels of discrimination in comparison to men applying to female dominated jobs 49 A 2018 systematic review of almost all correspondence experiments since 2005 found that most studies found that the evidence for gender discrimination is very mixed and that the amount of gender discrimination varies by occupation though two studies found a significant penalty for being pregnant or being a mother 50 A 2018 audit study found that high achieving men are called back more frequently by employers than equally high achieving women at a rate of nearly 2 to 1 51 In a 2016 interview Harvard Economist Claudia Goldin argued that overt discrimination by employers was no longer a significant cause of the gender pay gap and that the cause is instead more subtle cultural expectations which are a legacy of historical discrimination According to Goldin these expectations cause women on average to prioritize temporal flexibility take different risks and avoid situations of expected discrimination She advocated educational reforms to address the remaining gender pay gap rather than mandates on business arguing that the latter is simply too difficult to implement given the demands of the current business environment 52 A series of four studies from 2019 found that even if these careers do not pay less people assume that men will be less interested in any career that is majority female and that this has the potential to create a self fulfilling prophecy in that people are also less interested in promoting pay raises in female dominated caregiving careers yet if more men were to enter these occupations the salaries in these fields might also rise 53 A 2021 study in Sweden on affirmative action found that even though people s attitudes tend to be quite negative when women are favored they are even more negative when preferential treatment based on gender is offered to men 54 Parenthood and the Motherhood Penalty Studies have shown that an increasing share of the gender pay gap over time is due to children 55 56 The phenomenon of lower wages due to childbearing has been termed the motherhood penalty In short the motherhood penalty depicts the greater disadvantage mothers face as far as earning less wages than a childless woman 57 58 According to a study conducted by the Joint Economic Committee in 2014 mothers were shown to earn 3 less than childless women and 15 less than childless men 57 Although it is true that the gender pay gap has narrowed this phenomenon is essentially only significant for childless men and women 58 Further studies have shown that the motherhood penalty has been unwavering rather than declining like the gender pay gap 58 The contribution of the motherhood penalty to the disparity in earnings between genders differs between countries in Southern Europe mothers earn more than childless women in Nordic companies mothers earn slightly less in Continental Europe and Anglo Saxon European countries the difference is larger and in Eastern Europe a large part of the pay gap is due to motherhood 59 Traditionally mothers leave the workforce temporarily to take care of their children The length of parental leave of mothers affect the gender pay shorter parental leave may lead women to leave the workplace longer parental leaves can result in reduced wages of mothers moderate leaves allow mothers to balance career and motherhood 59 2 The availability of childcare can reduces the motherhood penalty as well as increasing workplace participation by mothers 59 2 Women tend to take lower paying jobs because they are more likely to have more flexible timings compared to higher paying jobs Since women are more likely to work fewer hours than men they have less experience 60 which will cause women to be behind in the work force Mothers are more likely to work part time 59 3 A 2019 study conducted in Germany found that women with children are discriminated against in the job market whereas men with children are not 61 In contrast a 2020 study in the Netherlands found little evidence for discrimination against women in hiring based on their parental status 62 Another explanation of such gender pay gap is the distribution of housework Couples who raise a child tend to designate the mother to do the larger share of housework and take on the main responsibility of childcare and as a result women tend to have less time available for wage earning This reinforces the pay gap between males and females in the labor market and now people are trapped in this self reinforcing cycle 63 Maternity leave in the United States The United States maternity leave policy states that employees who have worked the necessary allotted hours are allowed a total of 12 weeks away from work unpaid However these benefits are only regulated to employers who have more than 50 employees 64 Smaller businesses or companies with less than 50 people are not required to provide leave for new mothers While the 12 weeks are intended to be used after a mother gives birth or newly adopts the time can also be used up if there are complications with the pregnancy that require them to miss work 64 The 12 week unpaid policy in the U S is being expanded upon in a few states across the country For example New Jersey is now offering new mothers and their families the option to enroll in programs that allow them compensation while away from their job 65 Now mothers have a way secure income despite not working The introduction of a child to some American families results in 43 of new mothers in STEM Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics to face major career changes varying from abandoning the workforce entirely to exchanging their careers in STEM for part time work or a career in another field 66 While this is true for new mothers some studies show that both new mothers and fathers report being affected by flexibility stigma in the workplace 67 Flexibility stigma can be defined as the consequences imposed on workers for attempting to balance the responsibilities of their careers and families 68 It has also been found that career people of the STEM field with young children face more work family conflict as the demands of the rigorous STEM field and those of their young children overlap 69 Gender norms Another social factor which is related to the aforementioned one is the socialization of individuals to adopt specific gender roles 70 71 Job choices influenced by socialization are often slotted in to demand side decisions in frameworks of wage discrimination 72 rather than a result of extant labor market discrimination influencing job choice 73 Men that are in non traditional job roles or jobs that are primarily seen as a women focused jobs such as nursing have high enough job satisfaction that motivates the men to continue in these job fields despite criticism they may receive 74 According to a 1998 study in the eyes of some employees women in middle management are perceived to lack the courage leadership and drive that male managers appear to have 75 despite female middle managers achieving results on par with their male counterparts in terms of successful projects and achieving results for their employing companies 75 failed verification These perceptions along with the factors previously described in the article contribute to the difficulty of women to ascend to the executive ranks when compared to men in similar positions 76 Societal ideas of gender roles stem somewhat from media influences 77 Media portrays ideals of gender specific roles off of which gender stereotypes are built 78 These stereotypes then translate to what types of work men and women can or should do 77 In this way gender plays a mediating role in work discrimination and women find themselves in positions that do not allow for the same advancements as males 77 Some research suggests that women are more likely to volunteer for tasks that are less likely to help earn promotions and that they are more likely to be asked to volunteer and more likely to say yes to such requests 79 Consequences Female filmmakers protesting the gender pay gap and other inequalities in the film industry during the 2018 Cannes Film Festival The gender pay gap can be a problem from a public policy perspective because it reduces economic output and means that women are more likely to be dependent upon welfare payments especially in old age 7 8 9 For economic activity A 2009 report for the Australian Department of Families Housing Community Services and Indigenous Affairs argued that in addition to fairness and equity there are also strong economic imperatives for addressing the gender wage gap The researchers estimated that a decrease in the gender wage gap from 17 to 16 would increase GDP per capita by approximately 260 mostly from an increase in the hours females would work Ignoring opposing factors as hours females work increase eliminating the whole gender wage gap from 17 could be worth around 93 billion or 8 5 of GDP The researchers estimated the causes of the wage gap as follows lack of work experience was 7 lack of formal training was 5 occupational segregation was 25 working at smaller firms was 3 and being female represented the remaining 60 80 An October 2012 study by the American Association of University Women found that over the course of 47 years an American woman with a college degree will make about 1 2 million less than a man with the same education 81 Therefore closing the pay gap by raising women s wages would have a stimulus effect that would grow the United States economy by at least 3 to 4 82 83 For women s pensions Considering women make less than men overall they are also less likely to be eligible to participate in pension plans 84 This is because pensions plans are generally calculated based on one s salary per year 84 Further this would require women to be employed in jobs that offer retirement plans which they are less likely to be a part of than men 84 The European Commission argues that the pay gap has significant effects on pensions Since women s lifetime earnings are on average 17 5 as of 2008 lower than men s they have lower pensions As a result elderly women are more likely to face poverty 22 of women aged 65 and over are at risk of poverty compared to 16 of men 85 For education and debt Analysis conducted by the World Bank and available in the 2019 World Development Report on The Changing Nature of Work 86 connects earnings with skill accumulation suggesting that women also accumulate less human capital skills and knowledge at work and through their careers The report shows that the payoffs to work experience is lower for women across the world as compared to men For example in Venezuela for each additional year of work men s wages increase on average by 2 2 percent compared to only 1 5 percent for women In Denmark by contrast the payoffs to an additional year of work experience are the same for both men and women at 5 percent on average To address these differences the report argues that governments could seek to remove limitations on the type or nature of work available to women and eliminate rules that limit women s property rights Parental leave nursing breaks and the possibility for flexible or part time schedules are also identified as potential factors limiting women s learning in the workplace Economic theoriesNeoclassical models In certain neoclassical models discrimination by employers can be inefficient excluding or limiting employment of a specific group will raise the wages of groups not facing discrimination Other firms could then gain a competitive advantage by hiring more workers from the group facing discrimination As a result in the long run discrimination would not occur However this view depends on strong assumptions about the labor market and the production functions of the firms attempting to discriminate 87 Firms which discriminate on the basis of real or perceived customer or employee preferences would also not necessarily see discrimination disappear in the long run even under stylized models 88 Monopsony explanation In monopsony theory which describes situations where there is only one buyer in this case a buyer for labor wage discrimination can be explained by variations in labor mobility constraints between workers Ransom and Oaxaca 2005 show that women appear to be less pay sensitive than men and therefore employers take advantage of this and discriminate in their pay for women workers 89 Policy measuresAnti discrimination legislation According to the 2008 edition of the Employment Outlook report by the OECD almost all OECD countries have established laws to combat discrimination on grounds of gender Examples of this are the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 90 Legal prohibition of discriminatory behavior however can only be effective if it is enforced The OECD points out that herein lies a major problem in all OECD countries enforcement essentially relies on the victims willingness to assert their claims But many people are not even aware of their legal rights regarding discrimination in the workplace And even if they are proving a discrimination claim is intrinsically difficult for the claimant and legal action in courts is a costly process whose benefits down the road are often small and uncertain All this discourages victims from lodging complaints 91 Moreover although many OECD countries have put in place specialized anti discrimination agencies only in a few of them are these agencies effectively empowered in the absence of individual complaints to investigate companies take actions against employers suspected of operating discriminatory practices and sanction them when they find evidence of discrimination 91 92 In 2003 the U S Government Accountability Office GAO found that women in the United States on average earned 80 of what men earned in 2000 and workplace discrimination may be one contributing factor In light of these findings GAO examined the enforcement of anti discrimination laws in the private and public sectors In a 2008 report GAO focused on the enforcement and outreach efforts of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission EEOC and the Department of Labor Labor GAO found that EEOC does not fully monitor gender pay enforcement efforts and that Labor does not monitor enforcement trends and performance outcomes regarding gender pay or other specific areas of discrimination GAO came to the conclusion that federal agencies should better monitor their performance in enforcing anti discrimination laws 93 94 In 2016 the EEOC proposed a rule to submit more information on employee wages by gender to better monitor and combat gender discrimination 95 In 2018 Iceland enacted legislation to reduce the country s pay gap 96 Awareness campaigns Civil society groups organize awareness campaigns that include activities such as Equal Pay Day or the equal pay for equal work movement to increase the public attention received by the gender pay gap For the same reason various groups publish regular reports on the current state of gender pay differences An example is the Global Gender Gap Report Job flexibility The growth of the gig economy generates worker flexibility that some have speculated will favor women 97 However the analysis of earnings among more than one million Uber drivers in the United States surprisingly showed that the gender pay gap between drivers is about 7 in favor of men Uber s algorithm does not distinguish the gender of its workers but men get more income because they choose better when and in which areas to work and cancel and accept trips in a more lucrative way Finally men drive 2 2 faster than women which also allows them to increase their income per unit of time 97 98 99 The study concludes the gig economy can perpetuate the gender pay gap even in the absence of discrimination 97 98 99 In 2020 researchers from Stanford University used data from more than one million Uber drivers to show that despite female drivers earning 7 less than male drivers this difference was entirely attributed to three factors experience on the platform preferences and constraints over where to work and preferences for driving speed they noted that their results suggest that there is no reason to expect the gig economy to close gender differences Even in the absence of discrimination and in flexible labor markets women s relatively high opportunity cost of non paid work time and gender based differences in preferences and constraints can sustain a gender pay gap 100 101 undue weight discuss By countrySee also List of countries by male to female income ratio This is a plot of non adjusted pay gaps median earnings of full time employees according to the OECD Gender pay gap of Employee in OECD countries 102 Ratio of female to male salaries according to the Save the Children State of the World s Mothers report 2007 data Each color along the spectrum from red to violet represents 5 of the average male pay 103 Moreover the World Economic Forum provides data from 2015 that evaluates the gender pay gap in 145 countries Their evaluations take into account economic participation and opportunity educational attainment health and survival and political empowerment scores 104 Australia Main article Gender pay gap in Australia In Australia the Workplace Gender and Equality Agency WGEA an Australian Government statutory agency publishes data from non public sector Australian organizations There is a pay gap across all industries 105 The gender pay gap is calculated on the average weekly ordinary time earnings for full time employees published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics The gender pay gap excludes part time earnings casual earnings and increased hourly rates for overtime 106 Australia has a persistent gender pay gap Between 1990 and 2020 the gender pay gap remained within a range of between 13 and 19 107 In November 2020 the Australian gender pay gap was 13 4 108 Ian Watson of Macquarie University examined the gender pay gap among full time managers in Australia over the period 2001 2008 and found that between 65 and 90 of this earnings differential could not be explained by a large range of demographic and labor market variables In fact a major part of the earnings gap is simply due to women managers being female Watson also notes that despite the characteristics of male and female managers being remarkably similar their earnings are very different suggesting that discrimination plays an important role in this outcome 109 A 2009 report to the Department of Families Housing Community Services and Indigenous Affairs also found that simply being a woman is the major contributing factor to the gap in Australia accounting for 60 per cent of the difference between women s and men s earnings a finding which reflects other Australian research in this area The second most important factor in explaining the pay gap was industrial segregation 80 A report by the World Bank also found that women in Australia who worked part time jobs and were married came from households which had a gendered distribution of labor possessed high job satisfaction and hence were not motivated to increase their working hours 110 Brazil This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is needs tweaking for tone flow Please help improve this section if you can May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Global Gender Gap Report ranks Brazil at 95 out of 144 countries on pay equality for like jobs 111 Brazil has a score of 0 684 which is a little below 2017 s global index In 2017 Brazil was one of the 6 countries that fully closed their gaps on both the Health and Survival and Educational Attainment sub indexes However Brazil saw a setback in the progress towards gender parity this year with its overall gender gap standing at its widest point since 2011 This is due to an exponential growth of Brazil s Political Empowerment gender gap which measures the ratio of females in the parliament and at a ministerial level that is too large to be counterbalanced by a range of modest improvements across the country s Economic Participation and Opportunity sub index 112 According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics or IBGE women in Brazil study more work more and earn less than men On average combining paid work household chores and caring for people women work three hours a week more than men In fact the average women will work 54 4 hours a week and the average man will only work 51 4 hours per week Despite that even with a higher educational level women earn on average less than men do Although the difference between men s and women s earnings has declined in recent years in 2016 women still received the equivalent of 76 5 of men s earnings One of the factors that may explain this difference is that only 37 8 of management positions in 2016 were held by women According to IBGE occupational segregation and the wage discrimination of women in the labor market also have an important role in the wage difference between men and women 113 According to data from the Continuous National Household Sample Survey done by IBGE on the fourth quarter of 2017 24 3 of the 40 2 million Brazilian workers had completed college but this proportion was of 14 6 among employed men As reported by the same survey women who work earn 24 4 less on average than men It also cited that 6 0 of working men were employers while the proportion of women employers was only 3 3 The survey also pointed out that 92 3 of domestic workers a job culturally known as feminine and that pays low wages are women While high paying occupations like civil construction employed 13 of the employed men and only 0 5 of the employed women 114 Other reason that might explain the gender wage gap in Brazil are the very strict labor regulations that increase informal hiring In Brazil under law female workers may opt to take 6 months of maternity leave that must be fully paid by the employer Many researches are concerned with this regulations They question if these regulations may actually force workers into informal jobs where they will have no rights at all In fact women who work on informal jobs earn only 50 of the average women in formal jobs Between men the difference is less radical men working on informal jobs earn 60 of the average men in formal jobs 115 Canada A study of wages among Canadian supply chain managers found that men make an average of 14 296 a year more than women 116 The research suggests that as supply chain managers move up the corporate ladder they are less likely to be female Women in Canada are more likely to seek employment opportunities which greatly contrast the ones of men About 20 percent of women between the ages of 25 and 54 will make just under 12 an hour in Canada The demographic of women who take jobs paying less than 12 an hour is also a proportion that is twice as large as the proportion of men taking on the same type of low wage work There still remains the question of why such a trend seems to resonate throughout the developed world One identified societal factor that has been identified is the influx of women of color and immigrants into the work force These groups both tend to be subject to lower paying jobs from a statistical perspective 117 Each province and territory in Canada has a quasi constitutional human rights code which prohibits discrimination based on sex Several also have laws specifically prohibiting public sector and private sector employers from paying men and women differing amounts for substantially similar work Verbatim the Alberta Human Rights Act states in regards to equal pay Where employees of both sexes perform the same or substantially similar work for an employer in an establishment the employer shall pay the employees at the same rate of pay 118 China Using the gaps between men and women in economic participation and opportunity educational attainment health and survival and political empowerment The Global Gender Gap Report 2018 ranks China s gender gap at 110 out of 145 countries 119 As an upper middle income country as classified by the World Bank China is the third least improved country in the world on the gender gap The health and survival sub index is the lowest within the countries listed this sub index takes into account the gender differences of life expectancy and sex ratio at birth the ratio of male to female children to depict the preferences of sons in accordance with China s One Child Policy 120 4 26 In particular Jayoung Yoon a researcher claims the women s employment rate is decreasing However several of the contributing factors might be expected to increase women s participation Yoon s contributing factors include the traditional gender roles the lack of childcare services provided by the state the obstacle of child rearing and the highly educated unmarried women termed leftover women by the state The term leftover women produces anxieties for women to rush marriage delaying employment In alignment with the traditional gender roles the Women Return to the Home movement by the government encouraged women to leave their jobs to alleviate the men s unemployment rate 121 Dominican Republic Dominican women who are 52 2 of the labor force earns an average of 20 479 Dominican pesos 2 6 more than Dominican men s average income of 19 961 pesos 122 The Global Gender Gap ranking found by compiling economic participation and opportunity educational attainment health and survival and political empowerment scores in 2009 it was 67th out of 134 countries representing 90 of the globe and its ranking has dropped to 86th out of 145 countries in 2015 More women are in ministerial offices improving the political empowerment score but women are not receiving equal pay for similar jobs preserving the low economic participation and opportunity scores 120 15 17 23 123 European Union Gender gap in average gross hourly earnings according to Eurostat 2014 124 At EU level the gender pay gap is defined as the relative difference in the average gross hourly earnings of women and men within the economy as a whole Eurostat found a persisting gender pay gap of 17 5 on average in the 27 EU Member States in 2008 citation needed There were considerable differences between the Member States with the non adjusted pay gap ranging from less than 10 in Italy Slovenia Malta Romania Belgium Portugal and Poland to more than 20 in Slovakia the Netherlands Czech Republic Cyprus Germany United Kingdom and Greece and more than 25 in Estonia and Austria 124 However taking into account the hours worked in Finland men there only earned 0 4 more in net income than women 125 126 A recent survey of international employment law firms showed that gender pay gap reporting is not a common policy internationally Despite such laws on a national level being few and far between there are calls for regulation on an EU level A recent as of December 2015 resolution of the European Parliament urged the Commission to table legislation closing the pay gap A proposal that is substantively the same as the UK plan was passed by 344 votes to 156 in the European Parliament 127 The European Commission has stated that the undervaluation of female work is one of the main contributors to the persisting gender pay gap 128 They add that explanations of the pay gap goes beyond discrimination and that other factors contributes in upholding the gap factors such as work life balance the issue of women in leadership and the glass ceiling and sectoral segregation which has to do with the overrepresentation of women in low paying sectors 129 Finland On average between 1995 and 2005 women in Finland earned 28 4 less in non adjusted salaries than men 125 Taking into account the high progressive tax rate in Finland the net income difference was 22 7 125 Adjusted for the amount of hours worked and not including unpaid national military service hours these wage differences are reduced to approximately 5 7 non taxed and 0 4 tax adjusted 125 The difference in the amount of hours worked is largely attributed to social factors for example women in Finland spend considerably more time on domestic work instead 125 Other considerable factors are increased pay rates for overtime and evening night time work of which men in Finland on average work more 125 When comparing people with the same job title women in public sector positions earn approximately 99 of their male counterparts while those in the private sector only earn 95 130 Public sector positions are generally more rigidly defined allowing for less negotiation in individual wages and overtime evening night time work As of 2018 Finland is ranked fourth and has fully closed gender gap on Educational Attainment and have closed more than 82 of its overall gender gap 131 Germany Women earn 22 23 less than men according to the Federal Statistical Office of Germany The revised gender pay gap was 6 8 in the years 2006 2013 132 The Cologne Institute for Economic Research adjusted the wage gap to less than 2 They reduced the gender pay gap from 25 to 11 by taking in account the work hours education and the period of employment The difference in revenue was reduced furthermore if women had not paused their job for more than 18 months due to motherhood 133 134 The most significant factors associated with the remaining gender pay gap are part time work education and occupational segregation less women in leading positions and in fields like STEM 135 In 2017 Germany passed the Transparency in Wage Structures Act which requires larger employers to publish information about gender pay gaps and gives employees the right to information about their salary in comparison to members of the opposite gender Luxembourg In Luxembourg the total gender income gap represents 32 5 136 The gender pay gap of full time workers regarding monthly gross wages has narrowed over the past few years According to the data from OECD Organization for Economic Co operation and Development the gender pay gap dropped over 10 between 2002 and 2015 137 The gap is also dependent on the age group Females between the ages of 25 34 years are getting higher wages than males in this time period One of the reasons for that is that they have a higher level of education during this age From the age of 35 years males earn higher salaries than females 138 The current extent of gender pay gap refers to different factors such as varying working hours and diverse participation in the labor market 139 More females 30 4 than males 4 6 are working part time 140 due to this fact the overall working hours for females are lowered 136 The labor force participation represents 60 3 for females and 76 for males because most women will take advantage of the maternity leave 140 Males participate more often in higher paid jobs for instance in executive positions 93 7 what affects the scale of the gender pay gap as well 136 There is also a gender gap in vocational degree 12 and apprentice training 3 4 in Luxembourg 141 Netherlands In the Netherlands recent numbers from the CBS Central Bureau voor statistieken English Central Bureau of Statistics claim that the pay gap is getting smaller Adjusted for occupation level education level experience level and 17 other variables the difference in earnings in businesses has fallen from 9 2008 to 7 2014 and in government from 7 2008 to 5 2014 Without adjustments the gap is for businesses 20 2014 and government 10 2014 Young women earn more than men up until the age of 30 this is mostly due to a higher level of education Women in the Netherlands up until the age of 30 have a higher educational level on average than men after this age men have on average a higher educational degree The chance can also be caused by women getting pregnant and start taking part time jobs so they can care for the children 142 India Main article Gender pay gap in India For the year 2013 the gender pay gap in India was estimated to be 24 81 143 Further while analyzing the level of female participation in the economy a report slots India as one of the bottom 10 countries on its list Thus in addition to unequal pay there is also unequal representation because while women constitute almost half the Indian population about 48 of the total their representation in the work force amounts to only about one fourth of the total 144 Japan See also Overview of inequality in Japan Jayoung Yoon analyzes Japan s culture of the traditional male breadwinner model where the husband works outside of the house while the wife is the caretaker Despite these traditional gender roles for women Japan s government aims to enhance the economy by improving the labor policies for mothers with Abenomics an economy revitalization strategy Yoon believes Abenomics represents a desire to remedy the effects of an aging population rather than a desire to promote gender equality Evidence for the conclusion is the finding that women are entering the workforce in contingent positions for a secondary income and a company need of part time workers based on mechanizing outsourcing and subcontracting Therefore Yoon states that women s participation rates do not seem to be influenced by government policies but by companies necessities 121 The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 said that Japan s economic participation and opportunity ranking 106th 145th being the broadest gender gap dropped from 2014 due to lower wage equality for similar work and fewer female legislators senior officials and managers 120 25 27 Jordan From a total of 145 states the World Economic Forum calculates Jordan s gender gap ranking for 2015 as 140th through economic participation and opportunity educational attainment health and survival and political empowerment evaluations Jordan is the world s second least improved country for the overall gender gap 120 25 27 The ranking dropped from 93rd in 2006 123 9 In contradiction to Jordan s provisions within its constitution and being signatory to multiple conventions for improving the gender pay gap there is no legislation aimed at gender equality in the workforce 145 According to The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 Jordan had a score of 0 61 1 00 being equality on pay equality for like jobs 120 25 222 Korea As stated by Jayoung Yoon South Korea s female employment rate has increased since the 1997 Asian financial crisis as a result of women 25 to 34 years old leaving the workforce later to become pregnant and women 45 to 49 years old returning to the workforce Mothers are more likely to continue working after child rearing on account of the availability of affordable childcare services provided for mothers previously in the workforce or the difficulty to be rehired after taking time off to raise their children 121 The World Economic Forum found that in 2015 South Korea had a score of 0 55 1 00 being equality for pay equality for like jobs From a total of 145 countries South Korea had a gender gap ranking of 115th the lower the ranking the narrower the gender gap On the other hand political empowerment dropped to half of the percentage of women in the government in 2014 120 26 228 In 2018 the gender wage gap in South Korea is of 34 6 and women earned about 65 4 of what men did on average according to OECD data 146 With regards to monthly earnings including part time jobs the gender gap can be explained primarily by the fact that women work few hours than men but occupation and industry segregation also pay an important role 147 Korea is considered to have the worst wage gap among the industrialized countries 148 This gap is often overlooked 149 In addition as many women leave the workplace once married or pregnant the gender gap in pension entitlements is affected too which in turn impacts the poverty level 150 North Korea on the other hand is one of few countries where women earn more than men The disparity is due to women s greater participation in the shadow economy of North Korea 151 New Zealand Although recent studies have shown that the gender wage gap in New Zealand has diminished in the last two decades the gap continues to affect many women today According to StatsNZ the wage gap was measured to be 9 4 percent in September 2017 Back in 1998 it was measured to be approximately 16 3 percent There are several different factors that affect New Zealand s wage gap However researchers claim that 80 percent of these factors cannot be elucidated which often causes difficulty in understanding the gap 152 In order to calculate the gap New Zealand makes use of several different methods The official gap is calculated by Statistics New Zealand They use the difference between men and women s hourly revenue On the other hand the State Services Commission examine the average income of men and women for their calculation 152 Over the years the OECD has and continues to track New Zealand s along with 34 other countries gender wage gap In fact the overall goal of the OECD is to fix the wage gap so that gender no longer plays a significant role in an individual s income 153 Although it has been a gradual change New Zealand is one of the countries that has seen notable progress and researchers have predicted that it will continue to do so Russia Main article Gender pay gap in Russia A wage gap exists in Russia after 1991 but also before and statistical analysis shows that most of it cannot be explained by lower qualifications of women compared to men On the other hand occupational segregation by gender and labor market discrimination seem to account for a large share of it 154 155 156 157 158 159 The October Revolution 1917 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 have shaped the developments in the gender wage gap These two main turning points in the Russian history frame the analysis of Russia s gender pay gap found in the economic literature Consequently the pay gap study can be examined for two periods the wage gap in Soviet Russia 1917 1991 and the wage gap in the transition and post transition after 1991 Singapore According to Jayoung Yoon Singapore s aging population and low fertility rates are resulting in more women joining the labor force in response to the government s desire to improve the economy The government provides tax relief to mothers in the workforce to encourage them to continue working Yoon states that as female employment increases the gender gap in employment rates narrows down in Singapore 121 The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 ranks Singapore s gender gap at 54th out of 145 states globally based on the economic participation and opportunity the educational attainment the health and survival and the political empowerment sub indexes a lower rank means a smaller gender gap The gender gap narrowed from 2014 s ranking of 59 In the Asia and Pacific region Singapore has evolved the most in the economic participation and opportunity sub index yet it is lower than the region s means in educational attainment and political empowerment 120 25 27 United Kingdom In April 2018 the aggregate gender pay gap declined to 8 6 160 and even reversed for certain categories e g with men in their 30s paid less than women for part time work 161 The gap varies considerably from 4 4 women employed part time without overtime out earn men to 26 for UK women employed full time aged 50 59 161 In 2012 the pay gap officially dropped below 10 for full time workers 162 163 The median pay the point at which half of people earn more and half earn less is 17 9 less for employed women than for employed men 160 The most significant factors associated with the gender pay gap are full time part time work education the size of the firm a person is employed in and occupational segregation women are under represented in managerial and high paying professional occupations 164 In part time roles women out earn men by 4 4 in 2018 160 6 5 in 2015 5 5 in 2014 165 Women workers qualified to GCSE or A level standard experienced a smaller pay gap in 2018 Those qualified to degree level have seen little change 160 A 2015 study compiled by the Press Association based on data from the Office for National Statistics revealed that women in their 20s were out earning men in their 20s by an average of 1 111 showing a reversal of trends However the same study showed that men in their 30s out earned women in their 30s by an average of 8 775 The study did not attempt to explain the causes of the gender gap 166 needs update In October 2014 the UK Equality Act 2010 was augmented with regulations which require Employment Tribunals to order an employer except an existing micro business or a new business to carry out an equal pay audit where the employer is found to have breached equal pay law 167 The then prime minister David Cameron announced plans to require large firms to disclose data on the gender pay gap among staff 168 Since April 2018 employers with over 250 employees are legally required to publish data relating to pay inequalities Data published includes the pay and bonus figures between men and women and includes data from April 2017 169 170 A BBC analysis of the figures after the deadline expired showed that more than three quarters of UK companies pay men more on average than women 171 Employment barrister Harini Iyengar advocates more flexible working and greater paternity leave to achieve economic and cultural change 172 United States Main article Gender pay gap in the United States See also United States women and Equal Pay Act of 1963 source Retired footballer Brandi Chastain talking about the importance of equal pay regarding the U S women s national soccer team pay discrimination claim in 2019 In the US women s average annual salary has been estimated as 78 173 to 82 174 of that of men s average salary Beyond overt discrimination multiple studies explain the gender pay gap in terms of women s higher participation in part time work and long term absences from the labor market due to care responsibilities among other factors 175 176 177 The extent to which discrimination plays a role in explaining gender wage disparities is somewhat difficult to quantify A 2010 research review by the majority staff of the United States Congress Joint Economic Committee reported that studies have consistently found unexplained pay differences even after controlling for measurable factors that are assumed to influence earnings suggestive of unknown non measurable contributing factors of which gender discrimination may be one 178 Other studies have found direct evidence of discrimination for example more jobs went to women when the applicant s sex was unknown during the hiring process 178 See alsoEconomic inequality Feminization of poverty Gender inequality Gender pension gap Glass ceiling Global Gender Gap Report Income inequality metrics International inequality Lowell Mill Girls Material feminismFor other wage gapsRacial wage gap in the United States Gay wage gapReferences Gender Pay Gap www genderequality ie Progress on the Gender Pay Gap 2019 Glassdoor Glassdoor Economic Research 2019 03 27 Retrieved 2021 03 09 O Brien Sara Ashley April 14 2015 78 cents on the dollar The facts about the gender wage gap CNN Money New York Retrieved May 28 2015 7 wage gap between male and female college grads a year after graduation even controlling for college major occupation age geographical region and hours worked The Simple Truth About The Gender Wage Gap Report 1310 L St NW Suite 1000 Washington DC 20005 Spring 2018 Archived from the original on February 2017 Retrieved 19 March 2018 a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint location link Gurchiek Kathy April 2 2019 Study Global Gender Pay Gap Has Narrowed but Still Exists SHRM Retrieved May 25 2020 Average Cents Pence Earned by Women Per Dollar Pound Euro of Male Earnings 95 Eurostat 8 March 2017 Only 1 manager out of 3 in the EU is a woman earning on average almost a quarter less than a man PDF Press release a b Bandara Amarakoon 3 April 2015 The Economic Cost of Gender Gaps in Effective Labor Africa s Missing Growth Reserve Feminist Economics 21 2 162 186 doi 10 1080 13545701 2014 986153 ISSN 1354 5701 S2CID 154698810 a b Klasen Stephan 5 October 2018 The Impact of Gender Inequality on Economic Performance in Developing Countries Annual Review of Resource Economics 10 1 279 298 doi 10 1146 annurev resource 100517 023429 ISSN 1941 1340 S2CID 158819118 a b Mandel Hadas Shalev Michael 1 June 2009 How Welfare States Shape the Gender Pay Gap A Theoretical and Comparative Analysis Social Forces 87 4 1873 1911 doi 10 1353 sof 0 0187 ISSN 0037 7732 S2CID 20802566 Women s earnings as a percentage of men s 1979 2005 United States Department of Labor 3 October 2006 Retrieved 16 February 2020 a b Maloney Carolyn B April 2016 Gender Pay Inequity Consequences for Women Families and the Economy PDF Joint Economic Committee Pham Xuan Fitzpatrick Laura Wagner Richard 2018 01 01 The US gender pay gap the way forward International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 38 9 10 907 920 doi 10 1108 IJSSP 01 2018 0002 ISSN 0144 333X S2CID 150122314 Pleijt Alexandra de Zanden Jan Luiten van 2021 Two worlds of female labour gender wage inequality in western Europe 1300 1800 The Economic History Review 74 3 611 638 doi 10 1111 ehr 13045 ISSN 1468 0289 Weichselbaumer Doris Winter Ebmer Rudolf 2005 A Meta Analysis on the International Gender Wage Gap PDF Journal of Economic Surveys 19 3 479 511 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 318 9241 doi 10 1111 j 0950 0804 2005 00256 x S2CID 88508221 Stanley T D Jarrell Stephen B 1998 Gender Wage Discrimination Bias A Meta Regression Analysis The Journal of Human Resources 33 4 947 973 doi 10 2307 146404 JSTOR 146404 Goodley Simon 2011 08 31 Women executives could wait 98 years for equal pay says report The Guardian London Retrieved August 31 2011 While the salaries of female executives are increasing faster than those of their male counterparts it will take until 2109 to close the gap if pay grows at current rates the Chartered Management Institute reveals a b Gender pay gap statistics Statistics Explained ec europa eu Eurostat a b Kochhar Rakesh 11 December 2013 How Pew Research measured the gender pay gap Pew Research Center a b Australia s Gender Pay Gap Statistics Australian Government Workplace Gender Equality Statistics 20 February 2020 Workplace Gender Equality Agency 7 November 2013 What is the gender pay gap The Workplace Gender Equality Agency wgea gov au Australian Government Archived from the original on 31 October 2015 Retrieved 7 February 2019 The Gender Pay Gap Explained PDF gov uk Retrieved 7 February 2019 Breaking down the gender wage gap PDF dol gov Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2018 Retrieved 7 February 2019 Bureau US Census Income and Poverty in the United States 2016 www census gov Wilkinson Kate Mwiti Lee eds 27 September 2017 Do South African women earn 27 less than men Africa Check Hegeswisch Ariane Williams Baron Emma 7 March 2018 The Gender Wage Gap 2017 Earnings Differences by Race and Ethnicity Institute for Women s Policy Research Archived from the original on 5 August 2018 Sheth Sonam Hoff Madison Ward Marguerite Tyson Taylor 15 March 2022 These 8 charts show the glaring gap between men s and women s salaries in the US Business Insider a b McCandless David Quick Miriam Smith Stephanie Thomas Philippa Bergamaschi Fabio Gender Pay Gap Information is Beautiful Suddath Claire 2018 03 29 New Numbers Show the Gender Pay Gap Is Real Bloomberg com Retrieved 2020 09 26 Titcomb James 26 March 2018 Google reveals UK gender pay gap of 17pc The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 via www telegraph co uk Microsoft publishes gender pay data for UK Microsoft News Centre UK Microsoft 29 March 2018 a b Leythienne Denis Ronkowski Piotr 2018 A decomposition of the unadjusted gender pay gap using Structure of Earnings Survey data PDF Statistical Working Paper Population and social conditions European Union doi 10 2785 796328 ISBN 978 92 79 86877 1 Blau Francine D Kahn Lawrence M November 2000 Gender Differences in Pay Journal of Economic Perspectives 14 4 75 100 doi 10 1257 jep 14 4 75 S2CID 55685704 Women s earnings and employment by industry 2009 United States Department of Labor 16 February 2011 Retrieved 16 February 2020 Women in the Labor Force A Databook PDF United States Department of Labor December 2010 Retrieved 16 February 2020 Blackburn Robert M Jarman Jennifer 1997 Social Research Update 16 Occupational Gender Segregation sru soc surrey ac uk Department of Sociology University of Surrey Retrieved 2019 01 16 Eurofound 8 February 2017 Segregation Eurofound www eurofound europa eu Retrieved 2019 01 16 a b Folbre Nancy Gautham Leila Smith Kristin 2022 04 25 Gender Inequality Bargaining and Pay in Care Services in the United States ILR Review 76 86 111 doi 10 1177 00197939221091157 ISSN 0019 7939 S2CID 253880358 Gender inequality at work Jacobs Jerry A 1955 Thousand Oaks California Sage Publications 1995 ISBN 978 0803956964 OCLC 31013096 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b c Blau Francine D Kahn Lawrence M 2007 The Gender Pay Gap Have Women Gone as Far as They Can PDF Academy of Management Perspectives 21 1 7 23 doi 10 5465 AMP 2007 24286161 S2CID 152531847 Rachel Ngai L Barbara Petrongolo 2017 Gender Gaps and the Rise of the Service Economy PDF American Economic Journal Macroeconomics 9 4 1 44 doi 10 1257 mac 20150253 ISSN 1945 7707 S2CID 13478654 Blau Francine 2015 Gender Economics of International Encyclopedia of the Social amp Behavioral Sciences International Encyclopedia of the Social amp Behavioral Sciences Second Edition Elsevier pp 757 763 doi 10 1016 B978 0 08 097086 8 71051 8 ISBN 9780080970875 Woolston Chris 2019 01 22 Scientists salary data highlight US 18 000 gender pay gap Nature 565 7740 527 doi 10 1038 d41586 019 00220 y PMID 30670866 Cook Jackie February 22 2021 What Will it Take to Close the Gender Pay Gap for Good Morningstar com Retrieved 2021 02 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Thorbecke Catherine February 17 2021 Gender pay gap persists even at executive level new study finds ABC News Retrieved 2021 02 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Maloney Carolyn B April 2016 Gender Pay Inequity Consequences for Women Families and the Economy PDF Joint Economic Committee Women of Color and the Gender Wage Gap Center for American Progress Retrieved 2022 10 10 a b Misra Joya Murray Close Marta November 1 2014 The Gender Wage Gap in the United States and Cross Nationally The Gender Wage Gap in the United States and Cross Nationally Sociology Compass 8 11 1281 1295 doi 10 1111 soc4 12213 Koch Amanda J D Mello Susan D Sackett Paul R 2015 A meta analysis of gender stereotypes and bias in experimental simulations of employment decision making Journal of Applied Psychology 100 1 128 161 doi 10 1037 a0036734 ISSN 1939 1854 PMID 24865576 Rich Judith October 2014 What Do Field Experiments of Discrimination in Markets Tell Us A Meta Analysis of Studies Conducted since 2000 Discussion paper IZA Retrieved 2021 06 20 Baert Stijn 2018 Hiring Discrimination An Overview of Almost All Correspondence Experiments Since 2005 In S Michael Gaddis ed Audit Studies Behind the Scenes with Theory Method and Nuance PDF Methodos Series Cham Springer International Publishing pp 63 77 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 71153 9 3 ISBN 978 3 319 71153 9 S2CID 126102523 Retrieved 2021 06 20 Quadlin Natasha 2018 The Mark of a Woman s Record Gender and 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hdl 11250 2497041 S2CID 54929106 Kleven Henrik Landais Camille Sogaard Jakob Egholt January 2018 Children and Gender Inequality Evidence from Denmark NBER Working Paper No 24219 doi 10 3386 w24219 a b Maloney Carolyn B April 2016 Gender Pay Inequity Consequences for Women Families and the Economy PDF Joint Economic Committee a b c Misra Joya Strader Eiko 2013 GENDER PAY EQUITY IN ADVANCED COUNTRIES THE ROLE OF PARENTHOOD AND POLICIES Journal of International Affairs 67 1 27 41 ISSN 0022 197X via EBSCOhost a b c d Bishu Sebawit G Alkadry Mohamad G 2017 A Systematic Review of the Gender Pay Gap and Factors That Predict It Administration amp Society 49 1 8 doi 10 1177 0095399716636928 ISSN 0095 3997 S2CID 147452746 Analysis Here are the facts behind that 79 cent pay gap factoid Washington Post Hipp Lena 2019 Do Hiring Practices Penalize Women and Benefit Men for Having Children Experimental Evidence from Germany European Sociological Review 36 2 250 264 doi 10 1093 esr jcz056 hdl 10419 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Exists in the Gig Economy Fortune 6 February 2018 Retrieved 16 March 2018 Rosalsky Greg What Can Uber Teach Us About the Gender Pay Gap Ep 317 Freakonomics Retrieved 2021 06 28 Cook Cody Diamond Rebecca Hall Jonathan V List John A Oyer Paul The Gender Earnings Gap in the Gig Economy Evidence from over a Million Rideshare Drivers PDF 72 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help OECD Employment Outlook 2021 OECD Employment Outlook OECD 2021 doi 10 1787 5a700c4b en ISBN 9789264708723 S2CID 243542731 State of the World s Mothers 2007 PDF Save the Children p 57 Retrieved 16 February 2020 Schwab Klaus et al 2015 The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 PDF World Economic Forum pp 8 9 Retrieved 29 September 2016 WGEA Data Explorer WGEA Data Explorer Frequently asked questions about pay equity Department of Commerce Archived from the original on April 22 2011 Retrieved May 6 2011 Australia s Gender Pay Gap Statistics 2021 2021 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168 doi 10 1590 S1413 80502010000200002 ISSN 1413 8050 Larson Paul D Morris Matthew 2014 Sex and salary Does size matter A survey of supply chain managers Supply Chain Management 19 4 385 394 doi 10 1108 SCM 08 2013 0268 Congress C L n d Women in the Workforce Still a Long Way from Equality Archived 2016 03 10 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 23 2012 from Canadian Labour Congress For example Alberta Human Rights Act RSA 2000 c A 25 5 at 6 in Alberta and Pay Equity Act RSO 1990 c P 7 in Ontario Derocher John Student Global Gender Pay Gap Report World Economic Forum Retrieved December 5 2019 a b c d e f g Schwab Klaus Samans Richard Zahidi Saadia Bekhouche Yasmina Ugarte Paulina Padilla Ratcheva Vesselina Hausmann Ricardo Tyson Laura D Andrea 2015 The Global Gender Gap Report 2015 PDF World Economic Forum a b c d Yoon Jayoung 2015 Labor Market Outcomes for Women in East Asia Asian Journal of Women s Studies 21 4 384 408 doi 10 1080 12259276 2015 1106861 S2CID 155639216 Jorge Mateo Manauri 6 July 2016 La banca aprovecha que en Dominicana hay mas mujeres que hombres Forbes Mexico in Spanish Archived from the original on 9 July 2016 Retrieved 9 July 2016 a b Hausmann Ricardo Lauren D Tyson Saadia Zahidi 2009 01 01 The Global Gender Gap Report 2009 World Economic Forum ISBN 9789295044289 a b European Commission The situation in the EU Archived 2017 12 19 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on July 12 2011 a b c d e f Nupponen Sakari Miehet painavat toita niska limassa naiset eivat taloussanomat fi Taloussanomat Retrieved 28 December 2015 Tehtyjen tyotuntien maara on laskenut tasaisesti vuosina 1995 2005 tilastokeskus fi Tilastokeskus Retrieved 28 December 2015 Pay gap between men and women MEPs call for binding measures to close it News European Parliament News European Parliament 10 August 2015 Retrieved 2017 02 05 Wo liegen die Ursachen Europaische Kommission ec europa eu Retrieved 2012 02 18 The gender pay gap situation in the EU European Commission European Commission Jarvenpaa Heidi 13 February 2017 Naisen euron mysteeri asiantuntijat selittavat palkkaeron syita Jyvaskylan ylioppilaslehti in Finnish Retrieved 27 September 2019 John Derocher Student Global Gender Gap Report World Economic Forum Retrieved December 5 2019 Pressemitteilungen Gender Pay Gap 2013 bei Vollzeitbeschaftigten besonders hoch Statistisches Bundesamt Destatis Federal Statistical Office of German Archived from the original on 2014 11 15 Retrieved 2016 02 18 Beschaftigungsperspektiven von Frauen Nur 2 Prozent Gehaltsunterschied German Institute for Economic Research in German Retrieved 2016 02 18 Gender Pay Gap Wie gross ist der Unterschied wirklich Die Zeit ISSN 0044 2070 Retrieved 2016 02 18 Studie Geschlecht senkt Gehalt um sieben Prozent Die Zeit ISSN 0044 2070 Retrieved 2016 02 18 a b c The gender pay gap in Luxembourg PDF ec europa eu November 2018 Retrieved 2018 12 12 LMF1 5 Gender pay gaps for full time workers and earnings differentials by educational attainment PDF www oecd org September 18 2018 Retrieved 2018 12 12 BULLETIN DU STATEC 1 Salaires emploi et conditions de travail Sommaire PDF statistiques public lu February 2017 Retrieved 2018 12 12 A decomposition of the unadjusted gender pay gap using Structure of Earnings Survey data May 2018 a b Gender Employment and Parenthood The Consequences of Work Family Policies PDF 2015 Estevez Abe Margarita October 2006 Gendering the Varieties of Capitalism A Study of Occupational Segregation by Sex in Advanced Industrial Societies World Politics 59 1 142 175 doi 10 1353 wp 2007 0016 JSTOR 40060158 S2CID 27503441 CBS Krijgen mannen en vrouwen gelijk loon voor gelijk werk www cbs nl in Dutch Retrieved 2016 12 01 Gender Pay Gap in the Formal Sector 2006 2013 September 2013 Wage Indicator Data Report Eleventh Five Year Plan 2007 2012 planningcommission nic in Alfarhan Usamah F 2015 Gender Earnings Discrimination in Jordan Good Intentions Are Not Enough International Labour Review 154 4 563 580 doi 10 1111 j 1564 913X 2015 00252 x S2CID 155234203 Delfino Devon 12 countries where men earn significantly more than women Business Insider The Pursuit of Gender Equality An Uphill Battle OECD ILibrary Park Katrin S Korea reflects lag in gender equality Column USA TODAY Moon Grace The young Koreans pushing back on a culture of endurance www bbc com The Pursuit of Gender Equality An Uphill Battle www oecd ilibrary org 2017 doi 10 1787 9789264281318 en ISBN 9789264281301 Fyodor Tertitskiy 23 December 2015 Life in North Korea the adult years The Guardian Retrieved 2017 04 13 a b Gender Pay Gap Women govt 10 September 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2017 Gender Wage Gaps PDF oecd Retrieved 10 December 2017 Newell A Reilly B 2001 The Gender Pay Gap in the Transition from Communism Some Empirical Evidence Economic Systems 25 4 287 304 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 202 9177 doi 10 1016 S0939 3625 01 00028 0 S2CID 17330181 Ogloblin C G 1999 The Gender Earnings Differential in the Russian Transition Economy Industrial and Labor Relations 52 4 602 634 doi 10 1177 001979399905200406 S2CID 154728371 Katz K 2001 Gender Work and Wages in the Soviet Union A Legacy of Discrimination Palgrave ISBN 978 0 333 73414 8 Gerry C J Kim B Li C A 2004 The gender wage gap and wage arrears in Russia Evidence from RLMS PDF Journal of Population Economics 17 2 267 288 p 268 doi 10 1007 s00148 003 0160 3 S2CID 7435706 Hansberry R 2004 An Analysis of Gender Wage Differentials in Russia from 1996 2002 William Davidson Institute Working Paper Number 720 SSRN 615801 Kazakova E 2007 Wages in a Growing Russia When is a 10 percent rise in the gender wage gap good news Economics of Transition 15 2 365 392 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0351 2007 00282 x S2CID 58942405 a b c d Pyper Douglas McGuinness Feargal 7 November 2018 The gender pay gap via researchbriefings parliament uk a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b http researchbriefings files parliament uk documents SN07068 Data tables xlsx bare URL spreadsheet file King Mark November 22 2012 Gender pay gap falls for full time workers The Guardian Retrieved December 19 2015 Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2012 Provisional Results Office for National Statistics 22 November 2012 Thomson Victoria October 2006 How Much of the Remaining Gender Pay Gap is the Result of Discrimination and How Much is Due to Individual Choices PDF International Journal of Urban Labour and Leisure 7 2 Retrieved September 26 2012 Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2015 Provisional Results Office of National Statistics a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Women in their 20s earn more than men of same age study finds The Guardian 29 August 2015 The Equality Act 2010 Equal Pay Audits Regulations 2014 www legislation gov uk Staff writer 14 July 2015 David Cameron sets out plans to tackle gender pay gap BBC News Retrieved 11 February 2018 Staff writer 12 February 2016 Firms forced to reveal gender pay gap BBC News Retrieved 11 February 2018 PAYnotes on Gender Pay Reporting What employers need to know Paydata Ltd February 26 2016 Staff writer 5 April 2018 Final gender pay gap figures revealed BBC News Retrieved 5 April 2018 Iyengar Harini 5 April 2018 The gender pay gap data is in what now i newspaper Retrieved 5 April 2018 O Brien Sara Ashley April 14 2015 78 cents on the dollar The facts about the gender wage gap CNN Money New York Retrieved May 28 2015 Women in the labor force a databook PDF US Bureau of Labor Statistics December 2018 Retrieved 24 August 2019 An Analysis of Reasons for the Disparity in Wages Between Men and Women PDF US Department of Labor CONSAD Research Corp Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2016 Retrieved August 24 2019 Jackson Brooks June 22 2012 Obama s 77 Cent Exaggeration FactCheck org Graduating to a Pay Gap The Earnings of Women and Men One Year after College Graduation PDF a b Invest in Women Invest in America A Comprehensive Review of Women in the U S Economy Washington DC United States Congress Joint Economic Committee December 2010 p 80 Further readingAltonji Joseph G Blank Rebecca 1999 Chapter 48 Race and gender in the labor market Handbook of Labor Economics 3 C 3143 3259 doi 10 1016 S1573 4463 99 30039 0 ISSN 1573 4463 Brown Anna Patten Eileen 3 April 2017 The Narrowing But Persistent Gender Gap in Pay Washington D C Pew Research Center External links Look up pay gap in Wiktionary the free dictionary Gender pay gap statistics by Eurostat of the European Commission UK Gender Salary Comparisons for Graduates 6 months after leaving University Based on over 650 000 students Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gender pay gap amp oldid 1128488861, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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