Every Number Tells a Story. Choose Yours.
Our giving levels reflect real data from IWPR’s research—because evidence shapes not just our work, but how we invite you to support it.
By Eve Mefferd
The last Equal Pay Day of the year—October 21, 2021—marks the number of days into the new year that Latinas must work to earn what White men earned in 2020 (based on median annual earnings). Latinas’ median annual earnings for full-time, year-round work are $38,718, compared to $67,629 for White men. With a national wage gap of 42.7 percent, this means Latinas earn just 57 cents for every dollar made by White men, the largest difference of any major race and gender group. If progress continues at the same slow rate it has since 1985, Latinas won’t reach pay equity with White men until 2206—nearly two centuries from now. That’s simply too long to wait for economic equality. What can be done to improve pay equity for Latinas across the United States? Here are five steps we can take:
Join us and tune in to the Latina Equal Pay Day & Essential Women Worker Summit from Justice for Migrant Women, Equal Rights Advocates, and Parent Voices.
Read more about the Latinas and the wage gap, and follow the conversation on Twitter via @IWPResearch and #LatinaEqualPay.
Información en españo sobre salario justo para Latinas:
https://www.mamasconpoder.org/pago-de-salario-justo
Our giving levels reflect real data from IWPR’s research—because evidence shapes not just our work, but how we invite you to support it.