New York Times, December 24, 2006
Gender Pay Gap, Once Narrowing, Is Stuck in Place
By DAVID LEONHARDT
Throughout the 1980s
and early 90s, women of all economic levels – poor, middle class and rich –
were steadily gaining ground on their male counterparts in the work force. By
the mid-‘90s, women earned more than 75 cents for every dollar in hourly pay
that men did, up from 65 cents just 15 years earlier.
Largely without
notice, however, one big group of women has stopped making progress: those with
a four-year college degree. The gap between their pay and the pay of male
college graduates has actually widened slightly since the mid-‘90s.
For women without a
college education, the pay gap with men has narrowed only slightly over the
same span.
These trends suggest
that all the recent high-profile achievements – the first female secretary of
state, the first female lead anchor of a nightly newscast, the first female
president of Princeton, and, next month, the first female speaker of the House
– do not reflect what is happening to most women, researchers say.
A decade ago, it was
possible to imagine that men and women with similar qualifications might one
day soon be making nearly identical salaries. Today, that is far harder to
envision.
“Nothing happened to
the pay gap from the mid-1950s to the late ‘70s,” said Francine D. Blau, an
economist at Cornell and a leading researcher of gender and pay. “Then the ‘80s
stood out as a period of sharp increases in women’s pay. And it’s much less
impressive after that.”
Last year,
college-educated women between 36 and 45 years old, for example, earned 74.7
cents in hourly pay for every dollar that men in the same group did, according
to Labor Department data analyzed by the Economic Policy Institute. A decade
earlier, the women earned 75.7 cents.
The reasons for the
stagnation are complicated and appear to include both discrimination and
women’s own choices. The number of women staying home with young children has
risen recently, according to the Labor Department; the increase has been
sharpest among highly educated mothers, who might otherwise be earning high
salaries. The pace at which women are flowing into highly paid fields also
appears to have slowed.
Like so much about
gender and the workplace, there are at least two ways to view these trends. One
is that women, faced with most of the burden for taking care of families, are
forced to choose jobs that pay less – or, in the case of stay-at-home mothers,
nothing at all.
If the government
offered day-care programs similar to those in other countries or men spent more
time caring for family members, women would have greater opportunity to pursue
whatever job they wanted, according to this view.
The other view is
that women consider money a top priority less often than men do. Many may
relish the chance to care for children or parents and prefer jobs, like those
in the nonprofit sector, that offer more opportunity to influence other
people’s lives.
Both views,
economists note, could have some truth to them.
“Is equality of
income what we really want?” asked Claudia Goldin, an economist at Harvard who
has written about the revolution in women’s work over the last generation. “Do
we want everyone to have an equal chance to work 80 hours in their prime
reproductive years? Yes, but we don’t expect them to take that chance equally
often.”
Whatever role their
own preferences may play in the pay gap, many women say they continue to battle
subtle forms of lingering prejudice. Indeed, the pay gap between men and women
who have similar qualifications and work in the same occupation – which
economists say is one of the purest measures of gender equality – has barely
budged since 1990.
Today, the
discrimination often comes from bosses who believe they treat everyone equally,
women say, but it can still create a glass ceiling that keeps them from
reaching the best jobs at a company.
“I don’t think anyone
would ever say I couldn’t do the job as well as a man,” said Christine
Kwapnoski, a 42-year-old bakery manager at a Sam’s Club in Northern California
who will make $63,000 this year, including overtime. Still, Ms. Kwapnoski said
she was paid significantly less than men in similar jobs, and she has joined a
class-action lawsuit against Wal-Mart Stores, which owns Sam’s Club.
The lawsuit is part
of a spurt of cases in recent years contending gender discrimination at large
companies, including Boeing, Costco, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley. Last
month, the Supreme Court heard arguments in a case against Goodyear Tire and
Rubber.
At Sam’s Club, Ms.
Kwapnoski said that when she was a dock supervisor, she discovered that a man
she supervised was making as much as she was. She was later promoted with no
raise, even though men who received such a promotion did get more money, she
said.
“Basically, I was
told it was none of my business, that there was nothing I could do about it,”
she said.
Ms. Kwapnoski does
not have a college degree, but she is typical of the recent trends in another
way: the pay gap is now largest among workers earning relatively good salaries.
At Wal-Mart, the
percentage of women dwindles at each successive management level. They hold
almost 75 percent of department-head positions, according to the company. But
only about 20 percent of store managers, who can make significantly more than
$100,000, are women.
This is true even
though women receive better evaluations than men on average and have longer job
tenure, said Brad Seligman, the lead plaintiffs‚ lawyer in the lawsuit.
Theodore J. Boutrous
Jr., a lawyer for Wal-Mart, said the company did not discriminate. “It’s really
a leap of logic to assume that the data is a product of discrimination,” Mr.
Boutrous said. “People have different interests, different priorities,
different career paths” – and different levels of desire to go into management,
he added.
The other companies
that have been sued also say they do not discriminate.
Economists say that
the recent pay trends have been overlooked because the overall pay gap, as
measured by the government, continues to narrow. The average hourly pay of all
female workers rose to 80.1 percent of men’s pay last year, from 77.3 percent
in 2000.
But that is largely
because women continue to close the qualifications gap. More women than men now
graduate from college, and the number of women with decades of work experience
is still growing rapidly. Within many demographic groups, though, women are no
longer gaining ground.
Ms. Blau and her
husband, Lawrence M. Kahn, another Cornell economist, have done some of the
most detailed studies of gender and pay, comparing men and women who have the
same occupation, education, experience, race and labor-union status. At the end
of the late 1970s, women earned about 82 percent as much each hour as men with
a similar profile. A decade later, the number had shot up to 91 percent,
offering reason to wonder if women would reach parity.
But by the late ‘90s,
the number remained at 91 percent. Ms. Blau and Mr. Kahn have not yet examined
the current decade in detail, but she said other data suggested that there had
been little movement.
During the 1990s
boom, college-educated men received larger raises than women on average. Women
have done slightly better than the men in the last few years, but not enough to
make up for the late ‘90s, the Economic Policy Institute analysis found.
There is no proof
that discrimination is the cause of the remaining pay gap, Ms. Blau said. It is
possible that the average man, brought up to view himself the main breadwinner,
is more committed to his job than the average woman.
But researchers note
that government efforts to reduce sex discrimination have ebbed over the period
that the pay gap has stagnated. In the 1960s and ‘70s, laws like Title VII and
Title IX prohibited discrimination at work and in school and may have helped
close the pay gap in subsequent years. There have been no similar pushes in the
last couple of decades.
Women have continued
to pour into high-paid professions like law, medicine
and corporate
management where they were once rare, but the increases seem to have slowed,
noted Reeve Vanneman, a sociologist at the University of Maryland.
Medicine offers a
particularly good window on these changes. Roughly 40 percent of medical school
graduates are women today. Yet many of the highest paid specialties, the ones
in which salaries often exceed $400,000, remain dominated by men and will be
for decades to come, based on the pipeline of residents.
Only 28 percent of
radiology residents in 2004-5 were women, the Association of American Medical
Colleges has reported. Only 10 percent of orthopedic surgery residents were
female. The specialties in which more than half of new doctors are women, like
dermatology, family medicine and pediatrics, tend to pay less.
Melanie Kingsley, a
28-year-old resident at the Indiana University School of Medicine, said she had
wanted to be a doctor for as long as she could recall. For a party celebrating
her graduation from medical school, her mother printed up invitations with a
photo of Dr. Kingsley wearing a stethoscope – when she was a toddler.
As the first doctor
in her family, though, she did not have a clear idea of which specialty she
would choose until she spent a summer working alongside a female dermatologist
in Chicago. There, she saw that dermatologists worked with everyone from
newborns to the elderly and worked on nearly every part of the body and she was
hooked.
“You get paid enough
to support your family and enjoy life,” said Dr. Kingsley, a lifelong Indiana
resident. “Yeah, maybe I won’t make a lot of money. But I’ll be happy with my
day-to-day job, and that’s the reason I went into medicine – to help other
people.” She added: “I have seen people do it for the money, and they’re not
very happy.”
The gender
differences among medical specialties point to another aspect of the current
pay gap. In earlier decades, the size of the gap was similar among middle-class
and affluent workers. At times, it was actually smaller at the top.
But the gap is now
widest among highly paid workers. A woman making more than 95 percent of all
other women earned the equivalent of $36 an hour last year, or about $90,000 a
year for working 50 hours a week. A man making more than 95 percent of all
other men, putting in the same hours, would have earned $115,000 – a difference
of 28 percent.
At the very top of
the income ladder, the gap is probably even larger. The official statistics do
not capture the nation’s highest earners, and in many fields where pay has
soared – Wall Street, hedge funds, technology – the top jobs are overwhelmingly
held by men.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/24/business/24gap.html?_r=1&oref=slogin