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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper argues that despite the fact that women are more educated, their salaries are still less than that of a man in a comparable position. The concept is explored and supported by research. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA749gap.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Mankiller, Mink, Navarro, Smith, Steinem et al. (1998) explain that historically, men have always earned more than women. While this is something assumed, and proven to some extent, the reasons
why this occurs is not clear. Some studies provide different explanations for why white men earn more money than minorities, but they differ in their conclusions (Mankiller, Mink, Navarro, Smith,
Steinem et al., 1998). A part of the wage gap is attributable to the difference in skills, education and other individual endowments as it considers various groups (Mankiller, Mink, Navarro,
Smith, Steinem et al., 1998). Some claim that variances in education are part of the picture (Mankiller, Mink, Navarro, Smith, Steinem et al., 1998). In the past, education
was responsible for a considerable gap. Certainly, many years ago, men went to work while the women stayed home and tended to the home and children. That was something that
appeared for a time in twentieth century America for example, but once the World Wars began, women began to go to work outside of the home. During the 1960s, womens
rights were at issue. In fact, the Civil Rights Movement would address a number of things. Mankiller, Mink, Navarro, Smith, Steinem et al. (1998) explain that between 1885 and
1970, men did earn more, but after 1970 there had been growth in the female labor force. Also during this time, it was more common for women to attend college.
While women did so before this time, it was not a trend. Fast forward to today and more women than men go to college after high school. In part, this
helps to explain the narrowing of the gap, but the problem that seems to arise is that the gap only narrows so far. The impact of increased levels of educational
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