This is a plot of non-adjusted pay gaps (median earnings of full-time employees) according to the OECD. Moreover, the
World Economic Forum provides data from 2015 that evaluates the gender pay gap in 145 countries. Their evaluations take into account economic participation and opportunity,
educational attainment, health and survival, and
political empowerment scores.
Australia In Australia, the Workplace Gender and Equality Agency (WGEA), an Australian Government statutory agency, publishes data from non-public sector Australian organizations. There is a pay gap across all industries. The gender pay gap is calculated on the average weekly ordinary time earnings for full-time employees published by the
Australian Bureau of Statistics. The gender pay gap excludes part-time earnings, casual earnings, and increased hourly rates for overtime. Australia has a persistent gender pay gap. Between 1990 and 2020, the gender pay gap remained within a range of between 13 and 19%. In November 2020, the Australian gender pay gap was 13.4%. A 2009 report to the
Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs also found that "simply being a woman is the major contributing factor to the gap in Australia, accounting for 60 per cent of the difference between women's and men's earnings, a finding which reflects other Australian research in this area". The second most important factor in explaining the pay gap was industrial segregation.
Brazil The Global Gender Gap Report ranks Brazil at 95 out of 144 countries on pay equality for like jobs. Brazil has a score of 0.684, which is a little below 2017's global index. In 2017, Brazil was one of the 6 countries that fully closed their gaps on both the Health and Survival and Educational Attainment sub-indexes. However, Brazil saw a setback in the progress towards gender parity this year, with its overall gender gap standing at its widest point since 2011. This is due to an exponential growth of Brazil's Political Empowerment gender gap, which measures the ratio of females in the parliament and at a ministerial level, that is too large to be counterbalanced by a range of modest improvements across the country's Economic Participation and Opportunity sub-index. According to the
Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, or IBGE, women in Brazil study more, work more and earn less than men. On average, combining paid work, household chores and caring for people, women work three hours a week more than men. In fact, the average women will work 54.4 hours a week, and the average man will only work 51.4 hours per week. Despite that, even with a higher educational level, women earn, on average, less than men do. Although the difference between men's and women's earnings has declined in recent years, in 2016 women still received the equivalent of 76.5% of men's earnings. One of the factors that may explain this difference is that only 37.8% of management positions in 2016 were held by women. According to IBGE, occupational segregation and the wage discrimination of women in the labor market also have an important role in the wage difference between men and women. According to data from the Continuous National Household Sample Survey, done by IBGE on the fourth quarter of 2017, 24.3% of the 40.2 million Brazilian workers had completed college, but this proportion was of 14.6% among employed men. As reported by the same survey, women who work earn 24.4% less, on average, than men. It also cited that 6.0% of working men were employers, while the proportion of women employers was only 3.3%. The survey also pointed out that 92.3% of domestic workers, a job culturally known as "feminine" and that pays low wages, are women. While high paying occupations like civil construction employed 13% of the employed men and only 0.5% of the employed women. Other reason that might explain the gender wage gap in Brazil are the very strict labor regulations that increase informal hiring. In Brazil, under law, female workers may opt to take 6 months of maternity leave that must be fully paid by the employer. Many researches are concerned with this regulations. They question if these regulations may actually force workers into informal jobs, where they will have no rights at all. In fact, women who work on informal jobs earn only 50% of the average women in formal jobs. Between men the difference is less radical: men working on informal jobs earn 60% of the average men in formal jobs.
Canada A study of wages among Canadian
supply chain managers found that women make an average of $14,296 a year less than men. Similarly, a study in the
healthcare sector found that women health managers earn 12% less than men at the middle-level and 20% less at the senior level, after adjusting statistically for age, education and other characteristics. The research further suggests that as skilled professionals move up the management pipeline, they are less likely to be female. Each
province and territory in Canada has a
quasi-constitutional human rights code which prohibits discrimination based on sex. Several also have laws specifically prohibiting
public sector and
private sector employers from paying men and women differing amounts for substantially similar work. Verbatim, the Alberta Human Rights Act states in regards to equal pay, "Where employees of both sexes perform the same or substantially similar work for an employer in an establishment the employer shall pay the employees at the same rate of pay." However, pay equity policies do not adequately address
gender bias and the tendency for women to be clustered into jobs and sectors that pay less than men despite similarity in skills, qualifications, working conditions and levels of responsibility.
China Using the gaps between men and women in economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment,
The Global Gender Gap Report 2018 ranks China's gender gap at 110 out of 145 countries. As an upper middle income country, as classified by the World Bank, China is the "third-least improved country in the world" on the gender gap. The health and survival sub-index is the lowest within the countries listed; this sub-index takes into account the gender differences of life expectancy and sex ratio at birth (the ratio of male to female children to depict the preferences of sons in accordance with China's
One Child Policy).
Dominican Republic Dominican women, who are 52.2% of the
labor force, earn an average of 20,479
Dominican pesos, 2.6% more than Dominican men's average income of 19,961 pesos. The Global Gender Gap ranking, found by compiling economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment scores, in 2009 it was 67th out of 134 countries representing 90% of the globe, and its ranking has dropped to 86th out of 145 countries in 2015. More women are in ministerial offices, improving the political empowerment score, but women are not receiving equal pay for similar jobs, preserving the low economic participation and opportunity scores.
European Union At
EU level, the gender pay gap is defined as the relative difference in the average gross hourly earnings of women and men within the economy as a whole.
Eurostat found a persisting gender pay gap of 17.5% on average in the 27
EU Member States in 2008. There were considerable differences between the Member States, with the non-adjusted pay gap ranging from less than 10% in Italy, Slovenia, Malta, Romania, Belgium, Portugal, and Poland to more than 20% in Slovakia, the Netherlands, Czech Republic, Cyprus, Germany, United Kingdom, and Greece and more than 25% in Estonia and Austria. However, taking into account the hours worked in Finland, men there only earned 0.4% more in net income than women. A recent survey of international employment law firms showed that gender pay gap reporting is not a common policy internationally. Despite such laws on a national level being few and far between, there are calls for regulation on an EU level. A recent (as of December 2015) resolution of the European Parliament urged the Commission to table legislation closing the pay gap. A proposal that is substantively the same as the UK plan was passed by 344 votes to 156 in the European Parliament. The European Commission has stated that the undervaluation of female work is one of the main contributors to the persisting gender pay gap. They add that explanations of the pay gap goes beyond discrimination, and that other factors contributes in upholding the gap: factors such as work-life balance, the issue of women in leadership and the glass ceiling, and sectoral segregation, which has to do with the overrepresentation of women in low-paying sectors.
Finland On average, between 1995 and 2005, women in Finland earned 28.4% less in non-adjusted salaries than men. Public sector positions are generally more rigidly defined, allowing for less negotiation in individual wages and overtime/evening/night-time work. As of 2018, Finland was ranked fourth and had fully closed the gender gap on educational attainment, and had closed more than 82% of its overall gender gap.
Germany Women earn 22–23% less than men, according to the
Federal Statistical Office of Germany. The revised gender pay gap was 6–8% in the years 2006–2013. The
Cologne Institute for Economic Research adjusted the wage gap to less than 2%. They reduced the gender pay gap from 25% to 11% by taking in account the work hours, education and the period of employment. The difference in revenue was reduced furthermore if women had not paused their job for more than 18 months due to motherhood. The most significant factors associated with the remaining gender pay gap are part-time work, education and occupational segregation (less women in leading positions and in fields like
STEM). In 2017, Germany passed the
Transparency in Wage Structures Act, which requires larger employers to publish information about gender pay gaps and gives employees the right to information about their salary in comparison to members of the opposite gender. Six years later, the gender pay gap remains a significant issue. In 2023, women earned on average 18% less per hour than men, with the gap being smaller in East Germany than in West Germany. This disparity reflects differences in sectoral employment, working hours and career progression between men and women. Compared to other European Union countries, Germany has a relatively large gender pay gap. Factors contributing to this include a higher prevalence of part-time work among women, occupational segregation, differences in educational fields and limited access to senior management positions. The pay gap also varies by age and educational attainment. Research shows that the gender pay gap widens with age and remains evident across all levels of education, suggesting that long-term career patterns and structural inequalities play a significant role in wage disparities. The adjusted gender pay gap, after controlling for job-related characteristics, is substantially smaller, but still present. One of the strongest determinants of the gender pay gap in Germany identified in research is parenthood. studies show that women experience a significant wage disadvantage because many reduce their working hours or temporarily leave the labor market after having children. This leads to long-term income losses and slower career progression. Fathers typically do not face comparable wage reductions and tend to return more quickly to full-time employment. Differences in parental leave uptake reinforce this divide. In 2022, mothers accounted for almost 90% of all parental leave months, while fathers took substantially shorter periods on average. Moreover, wage inequality varies across sectors. Industries with strong collective bargaining coverage, such as the public sector, show a smaller gender pay gap. Private-sector industries with individualized wage-setting tend to exhibit larger disparities.
Ireland In
Ireland the average gender pay gap in 2022 was 9.3%. The Gender Pay Gap Information Act 2021 required all companies with more than 250 employees to publish annual gender pay gap reports, detailing mean and median gender pay gaps, bonus gaps, and information about gender representation within pay quartiles. In 2024, companies with more than 150 employees were included in the legislation. In 2025, all companies with 50 or more employees must report. When the gender pay gap legislation was introduced, the government stated that they would build a central portal to store the data, but this portal has not yet been delivered and no date had been communicated for its delivery as of November 2023. The standard of quality in the reports published has varied significantly, with many reports containing significant errors and missing data.
Luxembourg In
Luxembourg, the total gender income gap represents 32.5%. The gender pay gap of full-time workers regarding monthly gross wages has narrowed over the past few years. According to the data from
OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) the gender pay gap dropped over 10% between 2002 and 2015. The gap is also dependent on the age group. Females between the ages of 25–34 years are getting higher wages than males in this time period. One of the reasons for that is that they have a higher level of education during this age. From the age of 35 years males earn higher salaries than females. The current extent of gender pay gap refers to different factors such as varying working hours and diverse participation in the labor market. More females (30.4%) than males (4.6%) are working part-time, due to this fact the overall working hours for females are lowered.
Netherlands In the Netherlands, recent numbers from the CBS (Central Bureau voor statistieken;
English: Central Bureau of Statistics) claim that the pay gap is getting smaller. Adjusted for occupation level, education level, experience level, and 17 other variables the difference in earnings in businesses has fallen from 9% (2008) to 7% (2014) and in government from 7% (2008) to 5% (2014). Without adjustments the gap is for businesses 20% (2014) and government 10% (2014). Young women earn more than men up until the age of 30, this is mostly due to a higher level of education. Women in the Netherlands, up until the age of 30, have a higher educational level on average than men; after this age men have on average a higher educational degree. The chance can also be caused by women getting pregnant and start taking part-time jobs so they can care for the children.
India For the year 2013, the gender pay gap in
India was estimated to be 24.81%. Further, while analyzing the level of female participation in the economy, a report slots India as one of the bottom 10 countries on its list. Thus, in addition to unequal pay, there is also unequal representation, because while women constitute almost half the Indian population (about 48% of the total), their representation in the work force amounts to only about one-fourth of the total.
Japan Jayoung Yoon analyzes Japan's culture of the traditional male breadwinner model, where the husband works outside of the house while the wife is the caretaker. Despite these traditional gender roles for women, Japan's government aims to enhance the economy by improving the labor policies for mothers with
Abenomics, an economy revitalization strategy. Yoon believes Abenomics represents a desire to remedy the effects of an aging population rather than a desire to promote gender equality. Evidence for the conclusion is the finding that women are entering the workforce in contingent positions for a secondary income and a company need of part-time workers based on mechanizing, outsourcing and subcontracting. Therefore, Yoon states that women's participation rates do not seem to be influenced by government policies but by companies' necessities. According to
The Global Gender Gap Report 2015, Jordan had a score of 0.61; 1.00 being equality, on pay equality for like jobs. With regards to monthly earnings, including part-time jobs, the gender gap can be explained primarily by the fact that women work few hours than men, but occupation and industry segregation also pay an important role. Korea is considered to have the worst wage gap among the industrialized countries. This gap is often overlooked. In addition, as many women leave the workplace once married or pregnant, the gender gap in pension entitlements is affected too, which in turn impacts the poverty level.
North Korea, on the other hand, is one of few countries where women earn more than men. The disparity is due to women's greater participation in the
shadow economy of North Korea.
New Zealand Although recent studies have shown that the
gender wage gap in New Zealand has diminished in the last two decades, the gap continues to affect many women today. According to StatsNZ, the wage gap was measured to be 9.4 percent in September 2017. Back in 1998, it was measured to be approximately 16.3 percent. There are several different factors that affect New Zealand's wage gap. However, researchers claim that 80 percent of these factors cannot be elucidated, which often causes difficulty in understanding the gap. In order to calculate the gap, New Zealand makes use of several different methods. The official gap is calculated by
Statistics New Zealand. They use the difference between men and women's hourly revenue. On the other hand, the
State Services Commission examine the average income of men and women for their calculation. Although it has been a gradual change, New Zealand is one of the countries that has seen notable progress and researchers have predicted that it will continue to do so.
Russia A wage gap exists in
Russia (after 1991, but also before) and
statistical analysis shows that most of it cannot be explained by lower qualifications of women compared to men. On the other hand,
occupational segregation by gender and
labor market discrimination seem to account for a large share of it. The
October Revolution (1917) and the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, have shaped the developments in the gender wage gap. These two main turning points in the
Russian history frame the analysis of Russia's gender pay gap found in the economic literature. Consequently, the pay gap study can be examined for two periods: the wage gap in
Soviet Russia (1917–1991) and the wage gap in the transition and post-transition (after 1991).
Singapore According to Jayoung Yoon, Singapore's aging population and low fertility rates are resulting in more women joining the labor force in response to the government's desire to improve the economy. The government provides tax relief to mothers in the workforce to encourage them to continue working. Yoon states that "as female employment increases, the gender gap in employment rates...narrows down" in Singapore. although men get paid less than women for part-time work. The gap varies considerably from −4.4% (women employed part-time without overtime out earn men) to 26% (for UK women employed full-time aged 50 – 59). The
median pay, the point at which half of people earn more and half earn less, is 17.9% less for employed women than for employed men. The most significant factors associated with the gender pay gap are full-time/part-time work, education, the size of the firm a person is employed in, and
occupational segregation (women are under-represented in managerial and high-paying professional occupations). In part-time roles women out-earn men by 4.4% in 2018 Women workers qualified to
GCSE or A level standard, experienced a smaller pay gap in 2018. (Those qualified to degree level have seen little change). The then prime minister
David Cameron announced plans to require large firms to disclose data on the gender pay gap among staff. Since April 2018, employers with over 250 employees are legally required to publish data relating to pay inequalities. Data published includes the pay and bonus figures between men and women, and includes data from April 2017. A
BBC analysis of the figures after the deadline expired showed that more than three-quarters of UK companies pay men more on average than women. Employment barrister Harini Iyengar advocates more flexible working and greater paternity leave to achieve economic and cultural change.
United States talking about the importance of
equal pay regarding the U.S. women's national soccer team pay discrimination claim in 2019 In the US, women's average annual salary has been estimated as 78% to 83% of that of men's average salary. Beyond overt discrimination, multiple studies explain the gender pay gap in terms of women's higher participation in part-time work and long-term absences from the labor market due to care responsibilities such as
motherhood penalty, among other factors. In 2023, research at
PayScale showed that women's average pay as a percent of men's increased from 83% to 99% when controlling for job title, education, experience, industry, job level, and hours worked. Similar research from
Glassdoor in 2019 found an unadjusted figure of 79% and an adjusted figure of 95%. In 2023, women's earnings declined by 3 cents relative to men's, in all age groups. In 2022, childless men aged 25–34 earned significantly more than childless women of the same age group when
stratified by
educational attainment. Among all 25-34 year olds in 2022, both women and men with no children at home earned 97% of the median hourly earnings of men with children at home, while women with children at home earned 85%. == Remote workforce ==