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The MBA pay gap
Despite the
currency conferred by a newly-coined MBA, women are still finding it
hard trading achievement for equitable income on the job. A study
conducted by
Catalyst, an organization dedicated to women’s advancement in the
workplace, offers a dauntingly rocky playing field for new MBA women.
On average, they report, women earned
$4,600 less than men of the same cohort their first year on the job.
Details can be found at
Pipeline's Broken Promise. Catalyst president, Ilene Lang, in her
blog,
Catalyzing, amplifies the findings with figures reinforcing the
common wisdom that the boys’ club of Wall Street is still entrenched:
Men who’d been mentored received $9,260 more the first year of MBA
employment than women who’d been mentored.
Lang also reports that salary increments
for men with MBAs were larger than women’s and they were promoted more
frequently and lucratively than their female counterparts. In grim
end-game statistics, Catalyst reports that, by retirement, women will
have earned--across careers--$431,000 less pay over a 40-year career
span.
The figures are cautionary and not
irreversible. But they do show that women have a long, hard struggle
ahead to reach parity. |