By
Kate King
The wage gap between black women and white men in New York City
widened in recent years, while white women inched a bit closer to pay
equity, according to a report by the comptroller’s office.
Black
women in New York City made 57 cents for every dollar paid to white men
in 2016, a difference of roughly $32,000 in annual earnings. The gap
grew slightly, to 43 cents in 2016 from 42 cents in 2010, according to
the report, which compared the median earnings of full-time working men
and women.
White women, by contrast, made 82 cents for every
dollar, or $13,600 less in annual earnings, compared with white men in
2016, the most recent year for which data was available. This marked a
slight improvement from 2010, when the median earnings for white women
was 81 cents on the dollar.
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Source: The Wall Street Journal (via Empire Report New York)
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