The Columbus Dispatch

Study: Amazon pay split by gender, race

- Katherine Anne Long

More than 60% of the nearly 400,000 U.S. workers Amazon hired into its lowest-paying hourly roles between 2018 and 2020 were Black or Hispanic, and more than half were women, according to new employee demographi­c data for the years 2019 and 2020.

Meanwhile, the company’s highestpai­d tiers remain overwhelmi­ngly white or Asian and male, despite some progress on hiring a more diverse workforce in recent years, according to the data, which Amazon reports annually to the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Committee. The company stopped releasing EEOC data in 2016, but agreed to resume doing so after New York City Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer threatened to oppose Amazon’s board of directors candidates at the company’s 2021 shareholde­r meeting if the company did not disclose the informatio­n.

The new figures seem to underscore concerns from some employees and observers that a racial divide lies between the company’s corporate and tech workers and its warehouse workers. While Amazon was one of the first large employers in the country to offer a $15 minimum wage – its average starting wage is now $18 – the wealth generated by the company has largely not trickled down to its hourly workers, those employees say.

As Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s fortune grew $86 billion during the pandemic, “we’re living paycheck to paycheck,” Jennifer Bates, an Amazon warehouse worker, testified at a Senate hearing on wage inequality in March. Bates was one of the leaders of the failed union push at an Amazon facility in Bessemer, Alabama. Racial inequities were at the forefront of the union campaign; nearly 80% of the employees in the Bessemer warehouse are Black, including Bates.

Amazon spokespers­on Jaci Anderson

disputed that the EEOC data provides new ammunition for those who argue racial inequities exist at the e-commerce giant. The data is not the best tool for understand­ing Amazon’s demographi­c makeup, she said, because the company is required to follow the federal government’s reporting guidelines for job classifications, which do not exactly mirror Amazon’s job divisions. And Amazon’s warehousin­g and logistics wing gives workers a range of opportunit­ies, Anderson noted, from entry-level positions packing merchandis­e to technical and managerial roles.

Amazon’s own demographi­c data shows that in 2020, nearly 63% of its warehouse and call center workers were Black, Latino, Native American or multiracia­l, while just over 18% of its corporate and tech workers were.

Nor does the EEOC data Amazon released Wednesday contain informatio­n on workers’ salaries. Base salaries for corporate and tech positions, though, typically hover around $125,000 to $150,000, plus lucrative share grants, according to documents from Amazon’s second headquarte­rs search and an analysis of salaries in Amazon’s H-1B visa applicatio­ns.

Amazon’s hourly workers typically earn $38,000 a year, if they work full time, according to the company’s 2021 proxy filing. Many Amazon warehouse workers are part-timers, pulled onto the job for two or three months around the holidays or the company’s annual Prime Day sales event.

Amazon has made progress in diversifyi­ng its executive ranks, Anderson added. Between 2019 and 2020, people of color accounted for 42% of the additions to Amazon’s 2,600 highest-ranking employees, the EEOC data shows, and the number of Black senior leaders at Amazon more than doubled. Amazon employed 98 Black execs in 2020, compared to 39 the year before. The company has said it will again double the number of Black executives at the company in 2021.

Some corporate workers, meanwhile, have said Amazon is not moving quickly enough to hire, promote or retain a diverse workforce. The company is facing lawsuits from six women alleging racial and sexual discrimina­tion at the company.

In 2020, roughly 83% of Amazon’s 150,000 U.S. corporate workers, including mid- and entry-level managers, were white or Asian, and 69% were men – which is more diverse than five years prior, when 91% of employees in those roles were white or Asian, and 76% were men.

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