3.
Also from Table 1 in the BLS report, we find that for married workers
with a spouse present, women earned only 78.0% of what married men with a
spouse present earned in 2013 (see chart). Therefore, BLS data show
that marriage has a significant and negative effect on women’s earnings
relative to men’s, but we can realistically assume that marriage is a
voluntary lifestyle decision, and it’s that personal choice, not
necessarily labor market discrimination, that contributes to much of the
gender wage gap for married workers.
4. Also in Table 1, the BLS reports that for
young workers ages 25-34 years, women earned 89.4% of the median earnings of male full-time workers for that age cohort in 2013. Once
again, controlling for just a single important variable – age – we find
that almost half of the overall unadjusted raw wage gap for all workers
(17.9%) disappears for young workers.
5. In Table 7, the BLS
reports that for full-time single workers with no children under 18
years old at home (single workers includes never married, divorced,
separated and widowed
), women’s median weekly earnings were 96.1% of their male counterparts (see chart).
For this group, once you control for marital status and children, you
automatically explain almost 80% of the unadjusted gender earnings gap.
6.
Also in Table 7, the BLS reports that married women (spouse present)
working full-time with children under 18 years at home earned 78.9% of
what married men (spouse present) earned working full-time with children
under 18 years (see chart). Once again, we find that marriage and
motherhood have a significantly negative effect on women’s earnings; but
those lower earnings don’t necessarily result from labor market
discrimination, they more likely result from personal family choices
about careers, workplace flexibility, child care, and hours worked, etc.
7. If we look at
median hourly earnings, instead of median weekly earnings, the BLS reports in Table 8 that
women earned 86.6% of what men earned in 2013,
which accounts for about 25% of the raw 17.9% gender earnings gap that
exists for weekly earnings. And when we look at young workers, women
ages 16 to 19 years earned 96.7% of the hourly wage of their male
counterparts in 2013, and for the 20-24 year old group, women earned
94.0% of what men earned per hour. Also in Table 8, we see that for
never married
hourly workers of all ages, women earned 92.7% of the hourly earnings
of their male counterparts in 2013, which explains almost half of the
unadjusted 13.4% gender difference in hourly earnings.
Bottom Line:
When the BLS reports that women working full-time in 2013 earned 82.1%
of what men earned working full-time, that is very much different than
saying that women earned 82.1% of what men earned
for doing exactly the same work while working the exact same number of hours in the same occupation,
with exactly the same educational background and exactly the same years
of continuous, uninterrupted work experience. As shown above, once we
start controlling individually for the many relevant factors that affect
earnings, e.g. hours worked, age, marital status and having children,
most of the raw earnings differential disappears. In a more
comprehensive study that controlled for all of the relevant variables
simultaneously, we would likely find that those variables would account
for almost 100% of the unadjusted, raw earnings differential of 17.9%
lower earnings for women reported by the BLS. Discrimination, to the
extent that it does exist, would likely account for a very small portion
of the raw gender pay gap.
For example, in a 2005 NBER working paper “
What Do Wage Differentials Tell Us about Labor Market Discrimination?”
by June O’Neill (Professor of economics at Baruch College CUNY, and
former Director of the Congressional Budget Office), she conducts an
empirical investigation using Census data and concludes that:
There
is no gender gap in wages among men and women with similar family
roles. Comparing the wage gap between women and men ages 35-43 who have
never married and never had a child, we find a small observed gap in
favor of women, which becomes insignificant after accounting for
differences in skills and job and workplace characteristics.
This
observation is an important one because it suggests that the factors
underlying the gender gap in pay primarily reflect choices made by men
and women given their different societal roles, rather than labor market
discrimination against women due to their sex.
To
claim that a significant portion of the raw wage gap can only be
explained by discrimination is intellectually dishonest and completely
unsupported by the empirical evidence. And yet we hear all the time from
groups like the National Committee on Pay Equity, the American
Association of University Women, the Institute for Women’s Policy
Research, and
President Obama,
President Jimmy Carter and Virginia governor
Terry McAuliffe that “
women are paid 77 cents on the dollar for doing the same work as men.”
And in most cases when that claim is made, there is almost no attention
paid to the reality that almost all of the raw, unadjusted pay
differentials can be explained by
everything except discrimination
– hours worked, age, marital status, children, years of continuous
experience, workplace conditions, etc. In other words, once you impose
the important
ceteris paribus condition of “all other things
being equal or held constant,” the gender pay gap that we hear so much
about doesn’t really exist at all.
But we know by now that logic,
economic theory and empirical evidence won’t matter to gender activists,
progressives, and most Democrats, and all we’ll hear about regarding
the new BLS report will be that women earned only
82.1 cents for every dollar earned by men last year…. for
doing the same work, and how
unfair that is……
Related: The “Discriminator-in-Chief” Obama has his own
gender pay gap at the White House
that exposes his hypocrisy on this issue – while lecturing everybody
about the unfairness of the gender pay gap nationally using aggregate
salary data, an analysis of White House salaries shows that he pays his
own female staffers 13.3% less on average than his male employees.
Alternatively, if the 13.3% gender pay gap at the White House can be
explained by factors other than discrimination (like experience, age and
education), Obama should then stop using unadjusted, aggregate salary
statistics to lecture the country about a gender pay gap crisis at the
national level."
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