It's hard to argue that women don't take some kind of salary penalty—most studies have found some gap between what the genders earn—but in some fields, women are at a particular disadvantage, new research shows.
Jobs with wide pay gaps are common in health care: Women who are dentists, physicians, psychologists, pharmacists, medical technicians, and opticians see a difference in pay from their male colleagues that ranges from 14 percent to 28 percent.
In 2015, California passed California Fair Pay Act to ameliorate the pay gap in that state by mandating that male and female employees who do "substantially similar" work be paid the same. In this light, the bill gives power to employees who feel their compensation reflects workplace discrimination. Such laws serve a twofold purpose, said Dawn Lyon, Glassdoor's vice president of corporate affairs: They expose the wage gap and help women renegotiate their salaries as labor market conditions and experience levels change.
The job role with the smallest gender wage gap is event coordinator, with 0.2 percent higher average male pay. Some occupations, including social worker, communications associate, social media representative, and research assistant, even swing in the other direction, with women earning marginally more than men.
Krawcheck
suggests women overcome that discomfort about asking for a raise.
"Getting to his dollar represents a 30 percent or more increase in our
pay," she said, referring to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' estimate of
the wage gap. "If you make $85,000 a year and get the raise to men’s
level, that adds up to $1.7 million over the course of 30 years. That’s
worth the short-term stress."
An earlier version of this story was published, in error, with editor's notes.Culled from Bloomberg.com
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