The Gender Wage Gap, Around the World
By CATHERINE RAMPELLIn honor of International Women’s Day, which was Monday, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Factblog has been dissecting data on women’s role in the world.
Wages was one item examined. The chart below shows the percentage difference between the typical earnings of a full-time male worker and his female counterpart:
The biggest gender wage gap was in South Korea and Japan, where men earn wages more than 30 percent higher than women, and was smallest in Belgium, where the gap is 9.3 percent.
In the United States, the typical full-time female worker earns 19 percent less than the typical full-time male worker.
Wages was one item examined. The chart below shows the percentage difference between the typical earnings of a full-time male worker and his female counterpart:
Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Across industrialized countries, men’s median, full-time earnings were 17.6 percent higher than women’s. The biggest gender wage gap was in South Korea and Japan, where men earn wages more than 30 percent higher than women, and was smallest in Belgium, where the gap is 9.3 percent.
In the United States, the typical full-time female worker earns 19 percent less than the typical full-time male worker.
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