Wage gap for Minnesota women costs them $8 billion a year, study shows

The research by the National Partnership for Women and Families was released to coincide with Equal Pay Day on Tuesday, April 12, which marks how far into the new year women must work in order to catch up with what men were paid the year before.

With 68 percent of Minnesota women now bringing in more than a quarter of their families’ income and women heading more than 192,000 households, unequal wages are harming both families and the state economy, the study indicates.

The research was conducted by the National Partnership for Women & Families, in conjunction with the American Association of University Women.

“This new data illustrate the very real harm unequal wages are doing to families and the state,” said Debra L. Ness, president of the National Partnership for Women & Families. “It is long past time to close the gender-based wage gap. With women playing an increasingly important role as family breadwinners, there is no time to waste.”

According to the report, if the gap between men’s and women’s wages were eliminated, each fulltime working woman in Minnesota could afford mortgage and utility bills for seven more months, rent for 14 more months or three more years of family health insurance premiums. Necessities like these would be particularly important for the 25 percent of women-headed households in Minnesota that are currently living below the poverty line.

“This research proves that the gender pay gap is not simply a numbers issue or a women’s issue,” said AAUW Executive Director Linda Hallman. “It’s a bread-and-butter issue. It’s an everyday issue for people who are trying to support their families and provide for their futures. No more lip service, it\’s time to act.”

Minnesota is not the only state with a wage gap. In fact, every state has one. Nationally, women working full-time are paid an average of only 77 cents for every dollar paid to full-time working men. The gap has been closing at a rate of less than half a cent per year since the passage of the 1963 Equal Pay Act. At that pace, working women won’t come close to being paid the same amount as men until 2058.

“Unless lawmakers and employers make eliminating the wage gap a priority once and for all, generations of women and their families are going to continue to suffer due to unfair pay and discrimination,” Ness explained. “That’s why the re-introduction of the Paycheck Fairness Act in Congress is so essential. This legislation is critically important to efforts to end wage discrimination and ensuring that working women are paid fairly.”

The Paycheck Fairness Act, which would close loopholes in the Equal Pay Act and establish stronger workplace protections for women, was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives in the last Congress but fell two votes short of moving forward in the Senate last year.

The National Partnership for Women & Families is a non-profit, non-partisan advocacy group dedicated to promoting fairness in the workplace, access to quality health care, and policies that help women and men meet the dual demands of work and family. More information is available at the Partnership\’s website.

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