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Gender Wage Disparities among the Highly Educated
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2008
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Educational OutcomesEducational AttainmentFamiliar Regression-based DecompositionsGender Wage DisparitiesSocial SciencesGender DisparityGender StudiesBlack WomenPublic HealthEconomic InequalityStatisticsGender DiscriminationSocial InequalityCollege-educated Women—blackEducational StatisticsLabor Market OutcomeHigher EducationPopulation InequalitySociologyGender EconomicsGender DivideDemographyEducation Economics
We examine gender wage disparities for four groups of college-educated women—black, Hispanic, Asian, and non-Hispanic white—using the National Survey of College Graduates. Raw log wage gaps, relative to non-Hispanic white male counterparts, generally exceed -0.30. Estimated gaps decline to between -0.08 and -0.19 in nonparametric analyses that (1) restrict attention to individuals who speak English at home and (2) match individuals on age, highest degree, and major. Among women with work experience comparable to men's, these estimated gaps are smaller yet—between -0.004 and -0.13. Importantly, we find that inferences from familiar regression-based decompositions can be quite misleading.