http://www.iwpr.org/pdf/C355.pdf
Still A Man's Labor Market: The Long Term Earnings Gap New Report Analyzes the Causes and Costs of the Gender Wage Gap Over a 15-Year Period
Washington, DC - Women, in their prime earnings years, make only 38 cents for every dollar that men earn. In a groundbreaking new study, economists Heidi Hartmann of the Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR) and Stephen Rose of ORC Macro have teamed up to provide new estimates of the long-term gender earnings gap showing that women earn 62 percent less than men earn over a 15-year period. The typical prime age working woman earned only $273,592 between 1983 and 1998 while the typical working man earned $722,693 (in 1999 dollars). This gap of 62 percent is more than twice as large as the 23 percent gap commonly reported (based on the federal Current Population Survey).
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