Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Unequal Pay What Female Soccer Stars And MBAs Share
Unequal Pay What Female Soccer Stars And MBAs Share Every year, many post-graduates consider getting an MBA degree. While there are many reasons for pursuing the degree, one of the main considerations is whether the hefty price kalendertag and time spent in a typically 2-year program is a worthwhile investment. Women potentially face aleidher calculation, according to one Bloomberg report on the lack of women in MBA programs family planning.As Bloomberg reporter Natalie Kitroeff points out, according to business school deans Elite business schools typically prefer that applicants have about 5 years of work experience, which means the average MBA student is 30 years old at graduationWomen in their late 20s who think theyll want to have children at some point may feel theyd do better racking up career experience than taking two years off. In response, some business schools have attempted to reduce the admissions age to try to reach gender parity mora quickly in the classroom.Whatever t he reasons, though there has been some progress, women are much less likely to pursue and hold MBA degrees. As reported by Fortune, the average enrollment of women in full-time MBA programs at 36 business schools climbed from 32% to 36% between 2011 and 2015. The Economist points to its own rankings of business schools and finds an average female of enrollment of 30% in their list of 100 business schools. This compares to the near-parity women have achieved in law schools and medical schools across America.According to the Forte Foundation, unterstellung low MBA enrollment numbers are concerning because of the high ROI of an MBA. They report that an MBA degree is key to increasing your salary by 35-40% at graduation, 55-65% of your pre-MBA salary within 5 years, and an increase of $3 million in earnings over the course of your lifetime.Last week, however, a study suggests that women on average face a slightly different risk-reward decision than men considering an MBA degree. That st udy by the Graduate Management Admissions Council (GMAC) found that women who pursue an MBA degree earn approximately $400,000 less over their careers than men with MBA degrees. In a salary analysis comprising over 14,000 business school alumni, the salary gemeinsame agrarpolitik between male and female MBAs starts immediately after graduation and increases as the alumni move up in their careers to executive-level roles.Female alums of MBA programs earn 80% (or $165,000) compared to what male alums earn ($205,000) by the time they are in executive-level roles. And they also lag behind in the number of women who hold those roles, with female MBAs unternehmensverbund half the number of executive level roles compared to male MBAs and only one quarter of C-suite jobs, according to analysis by Fortune. While those salary levels may be the envy of most Americans, with MBA degrees paying off handsomely whatever your gender, clearly some alumni are better off than others. Equal pay and the average gender pay gap affects even the relatively few women holding Masters of Business degrees.While personal choices, industry and other professional choices may account for some of the gender pay gap among holders of MBA degrees, the source of the gender pay gap in professional sports is quite different. In both womens and mens versions of the same sports, people are clearly working in the same industry, and playing in parallel positions for parallel awards. These parallels may be why last week, 5 U.S. Womens National Team members filed a headline-making federal complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (the agency charged with enforcing equal pay laws and which recently upped the ante on employers gender pay disclosures) charging wage discrimination. These 5 U.S. womens soccer players and their lawyers argue hat they were paid nearly four times less than what their male counterparts earned, despite producing higher revenues for the U.S. Soccer organization. Ear lier in April, when the U.S. Womens National team win the World Cup, they were paid $2 million in prize money. The U.S. Mens National Team was awarded $8 million for reaching the round of 16, while the German men who won the World Cup earned $35 million.There are some that argue that comparing the prize money that goes to womens soccer relative to mens is unfair since the revenue underwriting the prize money is funded by the international FIFA organization, which earns a majority of its funding from media sponsorships. Sponsorships, in turn, are disproportionately devoted to mens sports for the much larger audiences they draw.In response, some argue that its unclear to what extent these lower audiences for womens sports and soccer are a self-fulfilling prophecy. As this ThinkProgress analysis points out, interest in womens soccer has been growing for 25 years whereas the quality and quantity of womens sports coverage and investment in marketing womens sports by FIFA has not been com mensurate. Moreover, there is no rule that says prize money is related directly to revenue-generated on a per event basis (and even if there were such a rule, in this case the U.S. Womens team players pointed out they out-performed the Mens Team on that basis). 26.7 million Americans tuned in to watch the womens World Cup finale, a record number of viewers in the U.S. for any soccer game broadcast in America. Its a startling reminder that women who go to work in very different places and with very different backgrounds can and still do face many of the same issues with equal pay.Fairygodboss is committed to improving the workplace and lives of women. Join us by reviewing your employer
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