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One chart shows the gap between men’s and women’s salaries is shrinking — and it’s good news for anyone looking for a job right now

One chart shows the gap between men’s and women’s salaries is shrinking — and it’s good news for anyone looking for a job right now


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  • A new report indicates the wage gap in the US is closing, at least when it comes to the salaries of new hires.  
  • Women who were new hires were offered salaries comparable to about 96% of their male counterparts, indicating the lowest difference, 4%, it’s ever been. 
  • That’s according to a new report from the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research in Michigan that looked at salary data of new hires in July 2020. 
  • Despite the hopeful trend, the gender wage gap is still a national problem. 
  • White women, on average, earn 80% of what white men do, while black women earn 66% and Hispanic women earn 58%, a pay gap of 42%, according to the US Census Bureau’s 2018 data. 
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

The US may be making strides toward closing the pay gap — at least for new hires.

It shows that recently hired women were offered salaries comparable to about 96% of men’s — which is an improvement from previous years. For example, in 2015 new hires who were women earned 88.8% of what men did.