A new Census Bureau study has found that there are few jobs in which women are paid more than men, and most of those jobs are in fields
that employ predominantly men, the Associated Press reports.
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The study found that women who work removing hazardous waste earned about $1.09
for every dollar that men did, and women who worked installing telecommunication
lines earned about $1.04 for every dollar that men did, the news service notes.
In another three jobs--meeting and convention planners; dining room and cafeteria
workers and bartender helpers; and construction trade helpers--women earn the
same as men.
Using data from the 2000 Census, the bureau looked at 505 categories of jobs,
but limited its study to occupations with 10,000 or more year-round, full-time
workers, at least 1,000 male workers, and at least 1,000 female workers.
The jobs with the biggest disparity between men's and women's wages included
paper goods machine setters, financial services sales agents, and judges. In
these jobs, women earned about 56 cents for every dollar earned by men, according
to the study.
Overall, the study found, women earned about 74 cents for every dollar earned
by men, the AP notes.
Experts say the disparity could reflect factors such as discrimination and
women leaving the workforce to raise children.
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