Difference between revisions of "Wage gap"

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The claim that women are paid less than men in a ''like for like comparison'' or ''for equal work'' has been widely debunked but continues to be widely reported as fact. The online ''Encyclopedia Britanica'' claims:
 
The claim that women are paid less than men in a ''like for like comparison'' or ''for equal work'' has been widely debunked but continues to be widely reported as fact. The online ''Encyclopedia Britanica'' claims:
   
<blockquote>This inequality in men’s and women’s pay scales, even for equal work, still exists.<ref>https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-work-organization-648000/Women-in-the-workforce</ref></lockquote>
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<blockquote>This inequality in men’s and women’s pay scales, even for equal work, still exists.<ref>https://www.britannica.com/topic/history-of-work-organization-648000/Women-in-the-workforce</ref></blockquote>
   
 
== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==

Revision as of 07:45, 27 September 2020

The gender pay gap so often spoken about and even cited in the media is not a result of a systematic bias against women. Research has clearly shown that the choices that men and women make, in the types of employment they undertake the amount of overtime they are prepared to work, and whether they are prepared to work in remote, dirty and dangerous conditions explain the vast bulk of the wage gap. A major study commissioned by the US department of Labor shows that in the United States the wage gap is reduced to 4.8-7.1% after taking in to account known factors.[1]

The claim that women are paid less than men in a like for like comparison or for equal work has been widely debunked but continues to be widely reported as fact. The online Encyclopedia Britanica claims:

This inequality in men’s and women’s pay scales, even for equal work, still exists.[2]

External Links

References