Current:Home > ContactThe Equal Pay Act passed over 60 years ago. So, why do women still make less than men? -MarketMind
The Equal Pay Act passed over 60 years ago. So, why do women still make less than men?
View
Date:2025-04-15 15:20:57
More than six decades after the U.S. banned gender-based pay discrimination, American employers continue to pay women less than men.
The Equal Pay Act, a federal law prohibiting pay discrimination, was signed into law by President John F. Kennedy on June 10, 1963, addressing what he called the "unconscionable practice of paying female employees less wages than male employees for the same job." Yet pay parity is still far from reality for working women.
For every dollar men earn today, women across the board earn 78 cents, according to US Census Bureau data analysis by the National Partnership for Women & Families. The data crunching included full-time and part-time workers and found that disparities were even wider for women of color. The disparities also exist for LGBTQ+ people and women of all backgrounds in leadership roles, according to the Human Rights Campaign and a watchdog report to Congress, respectively.
The gender pay gap hasn't shrunk much in the past two decades for a few reasons, according to a study by the Pew Research Center. A separate survey from the nonpartisan think tanks shows half of American adults – a majority of them women – agree that women and men are treated differently by employers.
Key factors sustaining the gender wage gap are workplace harassment, the lack of protection for parents and caregivers, segregation of men and women into different job types, and women entering the workplace after a history of earning lower or unequal wages, said Deborah Vagins, campaign director for the civil rights nonprofit Equal Rights Advocates and director of the national campaign Equal Pay Today.
"On average, women employed in the United States lose a combined total of more than $1.6 trillion every year due to the wage gap," according to a report from the National Partnership for Women and Families. "Families, businesses and the economy suffer as a result."
Even in industries they dominateWomen still don't get the top jobs or pay
What is the Equal Pay Act?
The Equal Pay Act prohibits employers from paying women less than their male counterparts for the same job. President John F. Kennedy signed The Equal Pay Act into law as part of his New Frontier Program, which included several reforms on social issues.
"This act represents many years of effort by labor, management, and several private organizations unassociated with labor or management, to call attention to the unconscionable practice of paying female employees less wages than male employees for the same job," Kennedy said of the new law at the time.
Many states enacted their own laws on pay equity. The federal law underwent several revisions over the years.
The law offered women the means to sue if they'd been paid less than men for the same job and thousands did. In one high-profile U.S. Supreme Court case, Lily Ledbetter sued Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. After working as a manager for nearly two decades, Ledbetter learned she was being paid significantly less than her male colleagues. A majority of five on the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Goodyear saying she had not filed her complaint in time.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who had overseen hundreds of gender discrimination cases as a lawyer, railed against her colleagues in her dissent, inspiring advocates and ultimately Congress to strengthen equal pay protections.
President Barack Obama enacted the resulting Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act in 2009, which amended the Equal Pay Act's definition of unlawful employment practice, allowing people to sue for discriminatory wages.
International Women's Day 2023Marks another year without shrinking the gender pay gap
Why are women paid less than men?
There are various explanations for why women earn less than men for the same labor, experts say. Some are persistent and some are new. They include:
- A continuing gender bias: About 61% of women said workplace discrimination was a major reason for the gap, according to a survey from the Pew Research Center.
- Occupational segregation, in which women are hired for and segregated into lower-paying jobs than men: Women are more present in higher-paying jobs that were traditionally dominated by men, including professional and managerial positions, but the Pew report found that "women as a whole continue to be overrepresented in lower-paying occupations relative to their share of the workforce."
- Overrepresentation in minimum-wage and sub-minimum wage jobs: Most people who would benefit from the minimum wage being raised are women and women are overrepresented in low-wage jobs and jobs that rely on tips, according to a 2021 report from the Center for American Progress, an independent nonpartisan policy institute.
- Situations that prevent women from economic mobility: Many jobs don't offer enough protections for caregivers, including paid leave. And women may face workplace harassment that might make them leave the workplace, and possibly take a lower paying job where they won't face abuse, Vagins, of Equal Rights Advocates, said.
What's next?
For decades, people have mobilized for pay equity and stronger workplace protections for women, and these efforts continue.
Advocates have sought federal legislation to close the loopholes in the Equal Pay Act and bridge the pay gap. One such measure, the Paycheck Fairness Act, has stalled in Congress.
Some states are experimenting with ways to close the gap, including wage transparency laws that require employers to post pay ranges for jobs and laws that bar employers from asking people about their prior salary history.
Contact Kayla Jimenez at kjimenez@usatoday.com. Follow her on X at @kaylajjimenez.
veryGood! (36145)
Related
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- 49ers QB Brock Purdy cleared to start against Bengals after concussion in Week 7
- Erdogan opts for a low-key celebration of Turkey’s 100th anniversary as a secular republic
- North Macedonia police intercept a group of 77 migrants and arrest 7 suspected traffickers
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- AP Top 25: Oklahoma slips to No. 10; Kansas, K-State enter poll; No. 1 UGA and top 5 hold steady
- African tortoise reunites with its owner after being missing for 3 years in Florida
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: No. 6 OU upset; No. 8 Oregon flexes; No. 1 UGA, No. 4 FSU roll before CFP debut
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- More help arrives in Acapulco, and hurricane’s death toll rises to 39 as searchers comb debris
Ranking
- Michigan lawmaker who was arrested in June loses reelection bid in Republican primary
- Spooky savings: 23 businesses offering Halloween discounts from DoorDash, Red Lobster, Chipotle, more
- Recall: Best Buy issuing recall for over 900,000 Insignia pressure cookers after burn risk
- C.J. Stroud's exceptional start for Texans makes mockery of pre-NFL draft nonsense
- IOC's decision to separate speed climbing from other disciplines paying off
- Trump and 3 of his adult children will soon testify in fraud trial, New York attorney general says
- The Trump era has changed the politics of local elections in Georgia, a pivotal 2024 battleground
- Israel says its war can both destroy Hamas and rescue hostages. Their families are less certain
Recommendation
Connie Chiume, Black Panther Actress, Dead at 72: Lupita Nyong'o and More Pay Tribute
Russia says it shot down 36 Ukrainian drones as fighting grinds on in Ukraine’s east
Matthew Perry's Family Speaks Out After Actor's Death
In Benin, Voodoo’s birthplace, believers bemoan steady shrinkage of forests they revere as sacred
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Less boo for your buck: For the second Halloween in a row, US candy inflation hits double digits
Mexico raises Hurricane Otis death toll to 43 and puts missing at 36 as search continues
Colombian police continue search for father of Liverpool striker Díaz