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Feb 26, 2016

By Eric B. Meyer

So, do we really have a gender pay gap? Or is it just a myth?

Well, first let’s talk about this study. Recently, “more than 3,200 workers and more than 220 human resource managers in the private sector across industries participated in a nationwide survey, conducted online by Harris Poll on behalf of CareerBuilder from November 4 and December 1, 2015.”

In addition to the startling results about the gender pay gap — and more on that in a bit — the study reveals that “more than half of workers (55 percent) do not believe men and women are paid equally for the same job, and a similar proportion (51 percent) do not feel men and women are given the same career advancement opportunities.” You can review all of the results here.

Pay gap based on gender? Or something else?

But, what of those one in five Human Resource managers “admitting that women do not make the same wages as their male counterparts at their organizations?”

Let’s assume that’s true. That is, there are women who make less than men for the same work. Does this mean that it’s because of their gender?

Well, studies I’ve read (this one, or example) show that men and women just starting their careers earn the same amount. It’s over time that men tend to earn more. But is that because of their gender?

Like my blogging buddy Robin Shea notes at her Employment and Labor Insider blog, there are neutral factors, other than sex, that could contribute to a growing pay disparity:

The “[gender] pay gap” compares the average pay of all women in the workforce with the average pay of all men in the workforce. It does not control for type of position held, geography, career ambition, family responsibilities, education, type of employer, length of employment, gaps in employment, era in which one entered the workforce, or anything else.

Are women paid less because of discrimination? Maybe. I can’t say no. But I can’t say yes, either. At least, not in this day and age. I suspect that these other factors account for the vast majority of the modern gender pay gap, so why blame it on employment discrimination and impose a significant new burden on employers?

Find out the reasons behind pay disparity

Either way, to those 80 percent of HR Managers who don’t see a pay disparity, don’t turn a blind eye to the possibility the protected-class motivates pay inequity. Rather, consider auditing job classifications to see if certain protected classes are getting paid more than others.

And, if so, learn the reasons why. If the pay disparity is based on a protected class, fixing that problem before it becomes a real legal issue.

This was originally published on Eric B. Meyer’s blog, The Employer Handbook.