No. In fact, research shows that after controlling for many factors including women’s college major, occupation, hours worked, grade point average, age, geographical region, and marital status, a portion of the gender wage gap still cannot be explained.
No. At the current rate, the wage gap for women in Massachusetts will not close until 2058.
Send an email to your employer through EqualPayMA’s contact tool, or have a conversation with your employer directly.
Not necessarily. To learn more, visit the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s FAQ page.
Please file a formal complaint with the Office of the Attorney General of Massachusetts.
If you are an employer, you can’t know if men and women are being paid equally in your organization if you haven’t completed an internal equal pay audit. The “Employer Tool Kit” contains easy and innovative solutions to help you close the gender wage gap.
If you have already completed an audit, the Employer Tool Kit offers additional strategies and best practices that will further promote equal pay in your workplace.
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Stay tuned for future Women's Economic Empowerment Series, free financial education and salary negotiation workshops.