The gender and racial wage gap, in one chart
Velandy Manohar
Retired First Medical Director, Aware Recovery Care, and President, ARC In Home Addiction Treatment PC
Vox
The gender and racial wage gap, in one chart
On Equal Pay Day, the wage gap is narrowing, but not quickly enough.
Updated by Soo Oh@SooOh Apr 4, 2017, 2:10pm EDT
The gender pay gap may be narrowing, but those pay increases aren’t happening equally for everyone. White women are making a lot more progress than their black and Hispanic peers, according to data on media hourly wages.
Advocates are taking notice of such disparities on Equal Pay Day — Tuesday, April 4 — which represents how far into the year women have to work to catch up to the amount men earned in the previous year. Although women have been steadily catching up to men’s pay for decades, median wages still fall short of white men’s, according to data from the Economic Policy Institute.
Median wages for white women at $17.70 an hour have now outpaced those of all black and Hispanic workers. Black and Hispanic women also still earn much less than their male counterparts.
And all women still lag far behind white men, who made $21.86 in median wages last year.
For more on Equal Pay Day, check out the most unequal jobs in America and the economic devaluation of women’s choices.