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Equal Pay Act Of 1963

Decent Essays

Introduction
Discrimination in the United States, has been, and continues to be a very large problem in our country. Although, the country has continued to make outstanding strides on getting rid of discrimination in this country as a whole, it tends to stick around. One of the largest controversies in the workforce today, is that women are continuing to be discriminated against by receiving less pay than males. This problem of women receiving less pay than males in the workforce is known as the Gender Wage Gap.
Equal Pay Act of 1963
The wage gap has been a problem in the workplace for a long time now, but we are seeing constant progress. In 1963, the Equal Pay Act was signed into place, this law was passed to try and abolish any type of …show more content…

Many of the duties once seen as “female duties,” are now becoming more of everyone duties. These duties can be performed by males and females. Many of the women in our society today are actually doing a lot of the stereotypical jobs that were once considered as jobs that are only for men. Some of these jobs include police officers, firefighters, union workers, construction workers, and many more.
Another societal view of women that continues, would be the thought of women as less superior than men. For a long period of time (hundreds of years), mankind has thought of the Caucasian American male as the dominant person in our society and workplace. Also, people have believed women and women of minorities to be less dominant, less educated, as well as not good enough to be as successful in higher up job positions. This cannot still be true with women receiving more education than men, and women being able to perform all of the same tasks that men complete. In today’s job market one prominent correlate for attaining professional careers is attaining a higher education. According to the National Center for Education Statistics from 2012, 88% of all males between the ages of 20-64 who earn at least a bachelor’s degree, are able to obtain a job, compared to women ages 20-64, where only 81% of women are able to obtain jobs (National Center for Education Statistics, 2013). This statistic specifically shows how women as a whole are actually getting more college degrees

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