A new study explains why female stockbrokers make less than
male counterparts
Nearly 50 years after the United States passed the Equal Pay
Act of 1963, the move toward achieving gender parity in the workplace is still
incomplete. As Rachel Maddow noted on
her show earlier this month,"If you aggregate everybody working in the
economy in every job, women get paid 77 cents for every dollar that men get
paid."
Now, a new study has examined in detail the gender pay gap
on Wall Street. In the paper,
"Performance-Support Bias and the Gender Pay Gap Among Stockbrokers,"
which will appear in the June issue of Gender & Society, Prof. Janice
Fanning Madden of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Business School
explains how female stockbrokers make less than their male counterparts.
"Stockbrokers are among the highest paid workers, yet
they have the greatest gender inequality among all sales worker jobs,"
Madden writes. The research is based on
data collected from two of the largest commercial brokerage houses in the U.S.,
after women at both firms sued over wage disparity over sexual discrimination,
LiveScience reports….
Find out more at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/18/female-stockbrokers-make-less_n_1528031.html?ref=business
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