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What people miss about the gender wage gap - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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When we talk about gender equality in the US there’s this one statistic you see all the time: "Women earn 79 cents for every dollar men make."
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And while that statistic is factually correct, there’s a lot it doesn’t tell you.
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It simply compares the median wages of men and women who work full time.
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It doesn’t tell you how the wage gap plays out for women with different educational levels or different ages, or who work in different fields.
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And you need that information if you want to start closing the gap.
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Part of the wage gap reflects the fact that women are more concentrated in lower-paying occupations.
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But to fully understand the issue, you have to look within occupations too.
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Back in 2009, three economists set out to understand the wage gap
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by following a group of MBA graduates from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.
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They looked at thousands of men and women who graduated between 1990 and 2006.
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And their data showed that men had slightly higher salaries right out of the gate.
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One year out of business school, women were making an average salary of $115,000 while men earned $130,000.
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But nine years out of business school, things looked really different. Men were earning an average salary of $400,000, while women were earning 60 percent less
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—$250,000 on average. The gap had widened considerably.
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But research suggests the gap doesn’t stay that wide — that it shrinks as women enter middle age.
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This chart shows how the wage gap for college graduates changes as women age. The lower the line, the bigger the wage gap between men and women.
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If you look at women born in 1973, you can see the wage gap growing as they go from their mid-twenties to their mid thirties.
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Better than previous generations but heading in the same direction.
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Same thing for women born in 1968.
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The pay difference for men and women continues to grow as they move from their mid-thirties to their mid-forties.
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And for women born in 1948, things started off the same. The gap widens as they get older. But then, all of a sudden, it starts shrinking.
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As working women approach their 50s and 60s, the difference between men’s and women’s salaries gets smaller
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Which makes sense if you think about what often happens during a woman’s 20s and 30s.
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In the Chicago MBA study, women with kids had a wage gap twice as large as women without.
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The truth is that women take on a disproportionate share of child-rearing tasks.
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A survey from Pew found that in 2-parent households, women did more than men when it came to managing kids’ schedules,
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taking care of them when they’re sick, and handling the majority of household chores.
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And that was a survey of families where both parents worked full-time.
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But these additional responsibilities seem to hurt some women more than others.
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This is a key research finding from Claudia Goldin, an economist at Harvard who is a leading researcher on the gender wage gap.
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She shows this by exploring how gender pay gaps vary in different fields.
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This is one of her charts. Each of these dots is a different higher-paying job.
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The lower the dot, the larger the gender pay gap. The further to the right, the more the job pays, based on the average income of men in that job.
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These green dots represent jobs in the tech sector.
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For the most part, the jobs are pretty close to the 0 line, meaning the difference in pay between men and women is fairly small.
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The same is true for jobs in science.
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The yellow dots.
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But look as these red dots.
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They represent jobs in business.
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And they’re mostly clustered toward the middle and the bottom of the chart, meaning they have some of the largest wage gaps.
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There’s a fairly simple way to explain some of these differences—some jobs require specific hours. Others are more flexible.
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Take your prototypical businesswoman. Maybe she’s a venture capitalist, maybe she’s an accountant. Either way, she has a standard 9-5 schedule so she can meet with other businesspeople or with clients.
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If she’s not available to her clients when they need her, her bosses won’t think she’s doing a good job.
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Compare that to a scientist who works in a lab. Most of her work is self-directed.
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It doesn't’ really matter when she runs her experiments, as long as she gets them done. If she gets her work done, her bosses think she’s doing a good job.
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For the millions of women in with jobs that demand very specific hours, the wage gap is larger than it is for women in jobs with more flexible hours
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There’s one job where we can see this really clearly. In 1970s, women pharmacists earned about 66 percent of what men did.
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Pharmacies used to be mostly independent businesses where a single pharmacist might be responsible for keeping his shop open whenever people needed it.
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Today, most pharmacies are owned by large chains. They stay open longer, which means they need more pharmacists.
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Women pharmacists now have a lot more options and a 6am to 2pm shift is just as good as a 9 - 5 shift. Nobody gets rewarded for working exceptionally long hours.
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And the wage gap for pharmacists has shrunk dramatically. Today, female pharmacists make 92 percent of what their male counterparts do.
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Of course, we can’t all be pharmacists. There will always be jobs where it’s important to work particular hours.
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But there are lots of jobs where hours could potentially become more flexible than they are right now.
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And research tells us the more we can make that work, the more the wage gap is going to shrink.
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