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Gender pay gap doubles over the course of women’s careers: Glassdoor report

Progress towards closing the gender pay gap has been slow and inconsistent. In 2024, the wage gap actually widened for the second year in a row: Women earned just 81 cents for every $1 paid to a man; that figure was 83 cents in 2023 and 84 cents in 2022.

Showing new data Gender pay gap more than doubles over a woman’s career, according to a glass door report It was published on Tuesday.

The report found that women’s earnings stop in their mid-30s, while men’s earnings continue to rise into their 40s.

Here’s why the pay gap continues to widen for women later in their careers and what employers can do to support women in the workplace.

How does the gap widen over time?

Glassdoor used its repository of salary data to calculate both the total pay gap between men and women over a 30-year career span and the “in-role” gap, where women are paid less than their male counterparts in similar positions. The report did not break down the results by race or ethnicity; the wage gap is often even wider black women and Latinos.

According to the report, the overall gender pay gap between men and women in the first 10 years of their careers increases from 12 percent to 19 percent, and the within-role gap increases from 0 percent to 4 percent.

Chris Martin, Glassdoor’s senior economist, attributes the top 12 percent difference to “cross-role” differences: Men and women “choose different jobs at different companies in different places,” which affects starting wages, he says.

Female dominated sectors I tend to be lower paid. than male-dominated ones. And research has shown In that case women entering professions Wages are falling in large numbers of these jobs.

Martin says the overall pay gap widens significantly in the second stage of women’s careers, between 10 and 30 years of experience, but the gap between roles remains steady at 5%.

According to the report, women’s wage growth remains steady at age 35, while men’s earnings continue to rise through their 40s. As a result, after 30 years of work experience, men earn 25% more than women.

Why does women’s salary remain at 35?

How can companies address the wage gap?

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