Make your tax-deductible gift by December 31—every gift matched, up to $150,000!
In this moment, the future of our rights, our bodily autonomy, our freedom feels uncertain. What we do next will make a difference for decades to come.
Make your tax-deductible gift by December 31—every gift matched, up to $150,000!
In this moment, the future of our rights, our bodily autonomy, our freedom feels uncertain. What we do next will make a difference for decades to come.
Double your impact in the fight to defend and restore abortion rights and access, preserve access to affordable child care, secure equality in the workplace and in schools, and so much more. Make your matched year-end gift right now.
Over centuries, Black women’s paid and unpaid labor built our economy—holding our country up to this day. And yet, Black women are still not being paid what they’ve, for far too long, been owed.
July 27 is Black Women’s Equal Pay Day—marking how far into this year Black women must work to be paid what white, non-Hispanic men were paid last year alone.
The wage gap costs Black women $1,891 per month, $22,692 per year, and $907,680 over a 40-year career.
What’s behind these staggering losses? Racism and sexism—which our institutions inflict on Black women at every turn, and in every sector, of our economy.
Today, the National Women’s Law Center released a fact sheet analyzing why this gender and racial wage gap persists. Here’s some of what we found:
1. Black women experience a wage gap compared to white, non-Hispanic men at every education level, even when they have earned a professional or graduate degree.
Many of us have been force fed the ideal of the “American dream.” This idea that if we work hard enough—and get enough education—we will earn more money, and therefore, succeed.
Well, that’s absolute bullshit.
Structural barriers, including racism and sexism, cannot be beaten by “hard work” or “pulling yourself up by the bootstraps.” Just look at the data below:
2. Black women face a wage gap in each of the ten occupations where they are most likely to work, many of which are low-paid.
In the United States, Black women face occupational segregation and are overrepresented in low-paid jobs. And in every common occupation, whether low-paid or not, Black women face racist and sexist wage gaps compared to their white, non-Hispanic male counterparts:
In “Still I Rise,” Maya Angelou writes:
Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise
She rises despite the pain, violence, and discrimination our country has inflicted on Black women for centuries. But what if, today and every day, our country—including everyone from business owners to lawmakers—were part of the tide that pushed Black women forward?
It’s beyond time to pay Black women what they’re owed. And it’s about time for our nation to invest in Black women and for Congress to pass bills like the Paycheck Fairness Act, the Raise the Wage Act, and the Schedules That Work Act, which would strengthen our equal pay laws and help Black women build greater economic security.