How colleges can close the persistent wage gap

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Last year, current and former women faculty members at Vassar College filed a lawsuit alleging the private college paid them less than men — a disparity that has remained consistently high over nearly two decades.

The case, which is ongoing, is just one example of women and people of color who say their colleges are paying them unfair wages. 

The gender and racial wage gap in higher education stems from “deeply rooted historical inequalities and systemic barriers” that still influences how colleges hire, promote and compensate faculty and staff, Gloria Blackwell, CEO at the American Association of University Women, said in an email. 

“The wage gap is not just about numbers on a paycheck — it’s about a legacy of exclusion that shapes our academic institutions even today,” she said. 

Still, experts say colleges and universities can take several steps to address pay gaps on their campuses. That includes working with consultants to determine the extent of their institution’s gap, auditing pay and making it more transparent, lessening the role implicit biases play on promotions and pay, and providing better workplace experiences for women and racial and ethnic minorities. 

Colleges risk losing top talent if they don’t address the wage gap. 

The persistent disparity has made academia an uphill battle for women and people of color — slowing their career progression or keeping them away from the profession altogether, Blackwell said. 

“We’re losing bright minds before they even get through the door,” Blackwell said. 

How wide is the gap?

It’s hard to nail down the extent of the pay gap. 

Today, women in higher ed earn an average of just 82 cents for every $1 that White men make, according to the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources. That gap widens to 76 cents for Black women and 72 cents for Hispanic and Latina women, CUPA-HR found. 

CUPA-HR researchers have noticed progress in pay equity for higher ed professionals since the 2016-17 academic year, including among faculty and administrators. That year, Black and White women who worked as tenure-track professors earned 96 cents and 97 cents respectively for every $1 earned by White men. Hispanic and Asian women earned slightly more than White men that year. By the 2022-23 academic year, White women earned 99 cents to every dollar earned by White men, while the gap closed for Black women. 

And that improvement is still, “for the most part,” on an upwards trajectory, said Melissa Fuesting, associate director of research at CUPA-HR. 

Other groups have landed on different estimates of the gender pay divide. 

The Segal Group, a human resources consulting firm, has found that women employed by the range of colleges it works with earn about the mid-90 cent range for every $1 made by men holding the same jobs, said Moshe Mayefsky, a compensation expert and vice president at Segal. 

When conducting pay equity studies for universities, Segal compares salary gaps between men and women employees with the same or substantially similar job. The group also factors in variables that differentiate pay, such as experience, said Mayefsky

The gap could be due to the disproportionate number of men in STEM jobs and full professor positions, which pay more than non-STEM jobs and assistant professorships, Mayefsky said.

The firm has seen promising signs that the gap is narrowing. The disparity Segal researchers noticed has closed a bit since 2010 when women were paid, on average, in the low-90 cents on the dollar range, he said. 

Institutions are “doing a pretty decent job, or at least have started pretty well, pretty strong,” at closing the pay gap, said Mayefsky

What’s behind the pay gap?

Several factors contribute to the pay gap. Much of it can be attributed to labor force experience and time on the job, both of which men tend to have more of, said Paula Cole, a teaching professor at the University of Denver with expertise in the economics of gender, race and inequality. 

Culturally, women are still expected to take on more care work in their homes, Cole said. But many universities provide advancement opportunities that do not fit within the working parent’s schedule. Cole gave the example of evening functions when parents — more often mothers — need to tend to their kids. 


We’re losing bright minds before they even get through the door.

Gloria Blackwell

CEO at the American Association of University Women


Discrimination also contributes to the pay gap — however, the extent that it does is harder to quantify, she said. 

In higher ed, differences exist between the fields that men and women tend to enter — and how those fields are valued, Cole said

Lower-valued fields often have “more feminine characteristics,” such as care work, while higher-valued fields are often “more masculine in nature,” Cole explained. 

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