Business Day (Nigeria)

Men cash in more than women after MBA

Five years after graduation, males earn 28% more than women

- JONATHAN MOULES

For women who want to get ahead, getting an MBA will help. But it will help men far more.

A global study into salary levels among 900 business school alumni found that the gender pay gap widened from 3 per cent before candidates started their MBA to 28 per cent five years after graduation.

The salary lift among MBA graduates was substantia­l regardless of gender, according to figures compiled by the Forté Foundation, which campaigns for greater gender balance on MBA courses.

Salaries on average rose 63 per cent five years after graduation among the survey’s female respondent­s to $152,806. Their male counterpar­ts, however, averaged a 76 per cent lift during the same period to $211,800.

Men also led larger teams five years after graduation than women, averaging 3.3 direct reports, compared with 1.8 among the female survey respondent­s.

Having an MBA was better news for people from minority groups. The pay divide between white students and those from black, Hispanic or Latin American background­s narrowed from 24 per cent pre-mba to 12 per cent in current roles.

Reducing the gender pay divide required a change in perception­s among students as well as employers, according to Michelle Wieser, acting dean of the business school at St Catherine’s University in Minnesota, who led the research project.

“We need coaches and careers advisers to play a role to help women prepare themselves for negotiatin­g pay,” she said. “Men have traditiona­lly done a better job at that.”

Apathy among those suffering lower pay was an important issue, Ms Wieser added. Four in ten of those who completed the Forté survey said they were the victim of pay discrimina­tion. Most responded by leaving the company.

Gender pay difference­s were partly a reflection of the industries where MBA graduates worked, the research concluded.

For instance, more women than men work in finance but men earn 60 per cent more on average than women.

Technology jobs generated one of the smallest gender pay gaps, but far fewer women than men worked in this sector.

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