Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Women’s pay growth outpaces men’s but still hasn’t caught up

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Women saw faster wage growth than men this year amid a tight U.S. labor market, according to newly compiled data from ADP Research Institute, although they still got paid more than 25% less on average.

The pace of pay increases for women surpassed that of men every single month since January.

In August, women’s wages were up 7.8% from a year earlier, compared with 7.5% for men. Younger workers also benefited from a pandemic-era boost in wages, with double-digit gains this year, according to the report released Wednesday.

Still, women remain underpaid. Men earned $64,100 annually on average in August, ADP data show, while women made $47,000, It means women earned about 73 cents for every $1 men made, according to the figures, which are based on payroll transactio­ns of more than 25 million workers. Younger workers are also generally paid less than more experience­d peers.

Overall, wage growth has flattened in recent months after a sharp accelerati­on in the previous year.

The year-over-year change remains elevated at 7.6% in August, ADP said — although it’s not enough to make up for inflation, which has been eating into households’ budgets this year. In early 2021, the wage rate was running at about 2%.

The revamped ADP report, which provides detailed wage data for the first time, confirmed two trends in the tight labor market: Lower-paid workers and people who switched jobs are getting bigger pay raises.

By industry, workers in leisure and hospitalit­y, along with trade, transporta­tion and utilities, posted the strongest annual pay growth. Higher-paying industries such as finance, informatio­n and profession­al services had smaller gains.

The report also showed those working at larger companies are seeing faster pay growth: 8.3% for companies with more than 500 workers, compared with 5.4% at those who employ fewer than 20 people.

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