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New Study Shows Women Choose Lower-Paying Majors

<p>A new study conducted by American Enterprise Institute scholar Mark J&period; Perry shows that women are more likely to choose less-lucrative college majors such as English&comma; Nursing&comma; and Journalism&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is true that some fields are associated with and dominated by a particular gender &ndash&semi; women in nursing and men in engineering&comma; for example&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On top of that&comma; traditionally &ldquo&semi;masculine&rdquo&semi; fields are typically associated with higher salaries&period; So the real question is&colon; do women have a tendency to choose lower-paying jobs&comma; or are the jobs offering a lower salary because they tend to be populated mainly by women&quest;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Study author Mark J&period; Perry&comma; a Professor at the University of Michigan of Flint&comma; argues that the gender pay gap is due not to employer discrimination&comma; but to the nature of the career itself&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Of all the bachelor degrees earned in 2014&comma; nearly 60&percnt; of them went to women &lpar;that&rsquo&semi;s 200&comma;000 more degrees to women than to men&rpar;&period; Even so&comma; many of these degrees were associated with lower-paying careers&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>On the flip side&comma; men dominated &lpar;by more than 80&percnt;&rpar; in 8 of the 10 highest-paying college majors&period;&nbsp&semi;On average&comma; 72&percnt; of bachelor&rsquo&semi;s degrees in the 10 highest-paying majors are awarded to men &lpar;this includes MIS&comma; Computer Science&comma; and Engineering&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&ldquo&semi;The raw gender wage gap doesn&rsquo&semi;t exist because employers discriminate against women in the labor market as much as it reflects voluntary and personal choices of both men and women in terms of college majors&comma; careers&comma; the number of hours worked&comma; and family roles and responsibilities&comma;&rdquo&semi; writes Perry&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What Perry&&num;8217&semi;s research seems to suggest is that the&nbsp&semi;quickest way for women to make more money is by moving away from &&num;8220&semi;feminine&&num;8221&semi; careers and exploring new fields of study &ndash&semi; including those traditionally dominated by men&period; &nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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