The Wage Gap Whether or not the wage gap exists depends entirely upon who one asks. If one is asking Christina Hoff Sommers, resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and writer for Time, she will say, no, it does not exist: “The bottom line: the 23-cent gender pay gap is simply the difference between the average earnings of all men and women working full-time.” The enduring myth that “women earn 77 cents for every dollar a man earns—for doing the same work” is based on the average earnings statistic—not on an actual analysis of a side by side comparison of pay for men and women doing the same work (Sommers). But if you ask Nikki Graf, Anna Brown and Eileen Patten, writing for Pew Research, you will research a much different answer. They argue that the pay gap is closing but that women are still behind by as much as 15 cents on the dollar. However, if one pays attention to the data that Graf et al. are using, one can see that Hoff Sommers has a point. These studies are not of side by side comparisons of wages for men and women doing the same work. They are rather statistics of median earnings—and all they really show is that men make more money than women: they do not actually show how that is happening, i.e., whether men are working more hours, working different jobs, or receiving higher pay because they have higher positions in companies. Both sides of the argument are correct, nonetheless: there is a wage gap—or rather...
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