In Big Cities, Young Women Outearn Men
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Could the days of a gender wage gap be behind us? They sure seem to be for young, college educated women in big cities, finds an analysis of BLS data completed by the Department of Sociology at Queens College in New York, released Aug. 3. Salaries of full-time female employees in their 20s have surpassed the same-aged males in cities like Chicago, Boston, Minneapolis, Dallas and New York. In New York City, these women earned 17 percent more than their male counterparts; in Dallas, this gap jumped to 20 percent. According to the NCPE (National Committee on Pay Equity), while women's wages have risen in all states since 1989 (from 68.5 to 77 percent in 2006), the typical full-time woman worker does not make as much as the typical man in any state. In Washington, D.C. over the same period, the gap actually increased. The NCPE argues that at the present rate of progress, it will take 50 years to close the wage gap nationwide. The Queens College report emphasized that the trend of women's salaries outpacing men's only occurred in urban areas. Women fared best in the northeast and west overall, but lagged the farthest behind in Arkansas, Louisiana and West Virginia. The news isn't much brighter among technology professionals. According to a report released by the IT staffing firm, Dice, in January, women earned on average 9.7 percent less than men in 2006. This narrowed slightly from the year prior when the difference was 10.9 percent. The IT gender gap was largest among database administrators, at 15 percent. However, the Dice survey noted some bright spots where a gender pay gap was absent. In fact, female professionals actually surpassed their male counterparts in salary among specific job titles, such as help desk professionals (4.8 percent), technical writers (2.5 percent) and IT executives. Female CEOs, CIOs, chief technology officers, vice presidents and directors earned 1.4 percent more than male IT executives, according to the report. Finally, like the Queens College research, the Dice report noted that younger female technology employees posted smaller salary gaps than older female technology employees. |
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Comments (4)
Many older women have taken off from work to rear kids and returned to their careers. Young women have not yet taken a leave so their wages, when compared to men are now getting greater. One cannot know if there is equality just by doing an age equilavent comparison without looking at actual career tracks but thie trend indicates a long term change in income for females.
Posted by Gary R Sweeten | August 7, 2007 1:53 PM
How is it a bright spot, as the article noted, that men in certain jobs earn less? If it is gender equality that is the issue then figure out why there is a difference for both men and women, not just women. To ignore why the men now make less is gender bias in itself.
Posted by John Beckvis | August 7, 2007 5:03 PM
A more accurate gauge would be to determine for the entry level-type jobs (and the career tracks, as Gary mentions), what were the qualifications of the applicant pool, by sex, and who got the jobs.
It would be great to have that data for more age groups as well.
I know in my industry (the media), women's salaries are now going down in relation to men's, recently falling from 77 percent to 75. And we had all hoped they would be going up!
Posted by Kristina Joukhadar | August 7, 2007 5:15 PM
I agree with John Beckvis.
The whole article seems to be unwittingly ironic in its question "has the wage gap finally disappeared" and then goes on to state that women in these urban areas now out earn men. Well....does that not mean that there is still a wage gap, only now a new one that favours women? Should it be celebrated that men are falling out educationally? I also wonder how much more promotions the women get do to affirmative action programs and so forth. These, I believe, unfair advantages women have (unfair now, since women have reached parity and in many instances out earn men--as in, why is affirmative action needed now?)would probably contribute to them making more money.
I think a proper analysis should be given to why men are falling behind in earnings, as well. Hey, it's in the intersts of equality, after all.
Posted by Sean McLeod | July 20, 2008 5:18 PM