- Women make up only 17 percent of Congress.
- Women make up almost 40 percent of full-time management workers, but the median wage of female managers is only 73 percent of what male managers earn.
- Only 4 percent of the CEOs in Fortune’s top 1,000 companies are female.
- As of this June, men had regained 46.2 percent of the jobs they lost in the recession, but for women that number was 38.7 percent
- The percentage of female electrical engineers doubled in each decade during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. But since 1990, it has increased by only a single percentage point, meaning women comprised only 10 percent of the total.
- Gender segregation in any field means that as occupations gain a higher percentage of female workers the pay for these jobs goes down relative to wages in similarly skilled jobs dominated by males.
- Coontz argues that it’s important to remember that earning more than a man with less education is not the same as earning as much as an equally educated man.
- Never-married childless 22 to 30 year old metropolitan area working women (with the same educational credentials as men earn less in every category according to a Boston University study.
- A 2010 Catalyst study found that female MBAs (on average) were paid $4,600 less than men in starting salaries, and continue to be outpaced by men in rank and salary growth throughout their careers even if they remain childless.
- The wife earns half or more of the family income in only 20 percent of all married-couple families.
- In 35 percent of marriages the wife earns less than 10 percent.
- Educationally, women today earn almost 60 percent of college degrees, up from about 30 percent in 1960.
- Among families in the top 25 percent of earnings distribution, women lead men by 13 percent in graduation rates, but among the lowest-income families women have only a 2 percent advantage.
- Between 1970 and 1985, women’s share of computer and information science degrees rose from 14 percent to 37 percent. But by 2008, women had fallen back to only 18 percent.
- Women get a smaller payoff then men for earning a high school degree, but a bigger payoff for completing college.
- A Pew Research Center 2011 poll revealed that 77 percent of Americans now believe that a college education is necessary for a woman to get ahead in life today, but only 68 percent think this is true for men.
- Today, men account for only 2 percent of kindergarten and preschool teachers, 3 percent of dental assistants and 9 percent of registered nurses.
Looking forward to your comments…