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You may also be interested in our blog on:
Gender
Pay Gap: 80 Cents For Each Dollar A Man Makes
Is Not Okay!
Here’s How To Make Sure It Doesn’t Happen
To You!
Making
a real difference on the job isn’t easy.
But what better legacy to leave to your daughters,
nieces,
granddaughters, and younger friends than to
eliminate the wage gap, once and for all?
How
much money are you losing because you’re not
paid fairly? Most working women today, if they’re
over thirty, would probably blurt out: No. A man would
be getting more.
Their
intuitive sense is borne out by the facts. Women working
full time—not part time, not on maternity leave,
not as consultants—still earn only 77 cents
for every full-time male dollar. The wage gap has
been stalled for more than a decade. It exists between
women and men working at every economic level, from
waitresses to corporate lawyers, from nurse’s
aides to CEOs. Very few individual women can ever
find out exactly what their male counterparts would
be making in the same job. But that yawning gap between
the average male and average female
paycheck is a pretty good clue that he’d be
paid more.
If
you’re a woman, what would you do with that
extra 23 cents—an increase of nearly one-third
on top of your current 77-cent paycheck—a
raise that got you even with men? That 23-cent gender
wage gap is a personal gap in each woman’s
life: vacations not taken, or dental work that’s
put off, or lessons that her children are denied.
Few
women think about it this way. Women don’t talk
about what they should have earned, or how
each year’s missing lump of money—whether
one thousand, ten thousand, or fifty thousand—would
have added up over her lifetime. Surely that attitude
is personally sensible: no sane person wants
to dwell on what she believes she can’t have.
But we’re not going to close the gender wage
gap until women realize how much it’s costing
us and our families. So let’s add it
up over a lifetime:
-
If you’re a young woman who graduated last
summer from high school, you will earn $700,000
less than the young man standing in line with
you to get his diploma over your working life.
- If
you graduated from college, you’ll lose
$1.2 million compared to the man getting his
degree along with you.
- If
you graduated from law school, medical school, or
got an MBA last summer, you’ll lose $2
million over your lifetime.
That money represents food you can’t buy,
credit cards you can’t pay off, lessons your
children won’t have, retirement savings you
can’t put away.
Of
course, your losses aren’t subtracted in one
lump sum. That money disappears over time, in little
nicks to your paycheck. Maybe you were hired for $1,000
less than the young man who took the same entry level
job. Or you got a smaller year-end bonus because you
and the man working alongside you were awarded bonuses
as percentage of salary--and his salary is larger.
Or you had to wait longer for a promotion because
you had to prove yourself first, while your male colleague
was promoted and given a raise based on his potential.
Or you were passed over for a project that would have
brought in a large bonus, because the boss assumed
you had to go home and cook for your family.
Each
such loss accrues. Many of us have seen those investment
charts that show how much $1,000 invested today would
turn into over ten or twenty or thirty years. That’s
what happens to the money you weren’t paid:
it doesn’t just add up, it multiplies over time.
Why
do you and other women lose so much money? Decades
ago, women used to hear that it was because women
weren’t as well-educated as men, hadn’t
worked as long as men, didn’t work as hard as
men, or really didn’t need the money because
they were just working until they got married. That’s
no longer true. For decades, women have been graduating
from college at the same rate as men —and have
even surpassed men in recent years. Women work as
hard as men. Women are often supporting children,
and maybe a disabled or unemployed husband, and need
the money just as much as men do. Often, married couples
rely on both paychecks. The only demographic difference
between male and female workers is a small, and closing,
difference in the length of years women have worked
in their careers. That cannot account for 23 cents.
Today,
many people believe that the wage gap is caused by
women who drop out of the workforce to have children.
But that can’t be true. The gender wage gap
is figured by comparing the earnings of all women
who work full-time with the earnings of all men who
work full-time. If a woman is not working full-time,
her wages (or lack thereof) are not included in wage
gap calculations. Others believe that women’s
wages are dragged down by the fact that some women
stop working full-time, and then return to work years
later at a lower rate of pay. But that idea is wrong,
too. Yes, some women do drop out to raise children.
But who in America can afford to do that nowadays?
Only the highest-educated women—lawyers, doctors,
MBAs—who have high-earning husbands can afford
to do that. But these women make up fewer than one
percent of the 44 million women who are working full
time and year round. They make much more than the
middle-earning women who pull in $31,000 each year.
When the higher-earning women reenter the workforce
after raising children, their professional salaries
(even if less than they might have been otherwise)
probably increase rather than decrease women’s
average wages.
It’s
time to stop blaming women for the gender wage gap.
It’s not our fault. Why do women earn 23 cents
less than men? Here’s why: Simply because we’re
women. And that’s unfair. It’s illegal.
It’s discrimination.
What
kind of discrimination?
- Plain
old discrimination
- Discrimination
by sexual harassment
- Discrimination
by sex segregation
- Working
while female
- Discrimination
against mothers
Go
to www.wageproject.org
and look at the sex discrimination case file. You’ll
see how widespread sex discrimination is—and
how often employers would rather pay a one-time fine
rather than actually make changes in their organizations
that would be fair to women. Or glance at the book
Getting Even, which looks into sex discrimination
in great detail. What you’ll find is that illegal
sex discrimination is rife all across the American
workplace, at every economic level, from secretary
to CEO. There’s plain old discrimination,
which openly bans women from hiring and advancement,
or fires women who get pregnant. There’s discrimination
by sexual harassment, which terrorizes women
and drives them out of jobs. There’s discrimination
by sex segregation, which slots women into
job categories that are consistently underpaid. There’s
working while female, our term for
the every day discrimination in which women get overlooked,
underappreciated, and consistently paid less than
their male colleagues. There’s discrimination
against mothers, which forces women (and
not men) to pay for parenting. All this scrapes away
women’s earnings, day after day, year after
year, throughout our lives.
This
means the only way to get your paycheck even with
men’s is to change the American workplace. If
you think you’re being paid unfairly, or if
you know other women who are, go to www.wageproject.org.
Read the accounts of other women who faced similar
situations. Use the wage calculator to figure out
more accurately how much you’re losing over
a lifetime—not on average, but taking into account
your job, your education, your part of the country.
That information will help motivate you—and
will give you a useful tool for making change down
the road.
Then
start a WAGE
Club. Talk about your working conditions with
friends. On the WAGE Project website, you’ll
find a discussion guide. Use it to spark discussions
about your working conditions and your earnings, and
to help you work with other women and men to make
sure women are paid fairly. If every one of us acts—and
acts now—to get paid fairly, all of us can eliminate
the gender wage gap within a decade.
Making
a real difference on the job isn’t easy. But
what better legacy to leave to your daughters, nieces,
granddaughters, and younger friends than to eliminate
the wage gap, once and for all?
By
the same author:
Sex
Discrimination: What should you do now?
Recent
Sex Discrimination Lawsuits and Awards
About
Author:
Evelyn Murphy is the former Lt. Governor
of Massachusetts—the first woman in the state’s
200 year history to hold a constitutional office.
Evelyn Murphy is Founder and President of The WAGE
Project, Inc. and Resident Scholar in the Women’s
Studies Research Center at Brandeis University where
she researched Getting Even: Why Women Don’t
Get Paid Like Men and What to Do About It, by
Evelyn Murphy with E.J. Graff, published by Simon
& Schuster in October 2005. The WAGE Project is
a national organization dedicated to getting women
paid like men.
About
the Writer:

E.J. Graff, a resident scholar at the Brandeis
Women’s Studies Research Center, is an author
and journalist. Her work appears in such publications
as The New York Times Magazine, The Boston Globe,
The Los Angeles Times, Ms., The Nation, The New Republic,
The Village Voice, Salon.com, The Women’s Review
of Books, and in more than a dozen anthologies.
She is a senior correspondent for The American
Prospect.
Getting
Even
Why
Women Don't Get Paid Like Men—And What to Do
About It
In Association with Amazon.com
*
You may also be interested in our blog on:
Gender
Pay Gap: 80 Cents For Each Dollar A Man Makes
Is Not Okay!
Here’s How To Make Sure It Doesn’t Happen
To You!