In 2023, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that women's median weekly earnings were approximately 84 percent of men's — a 16 percent gap. But this raw comparison includes workers in different occupations, with different experience levels, and in different industries. When economists control for these factors, the unexplained gap narrows to roughly 5–8 percent. That residual — the portion of the wage gap that remains after accounting for every measurable productivity factor — is the economist's best estimate of labor market wage discrimination. Small in percentage terms, large in career impact, and robustly documented across decades of research.
In plain terms
Wage discrimination is the payment of different wages to workers with equal productivity based on characteristics unrelated to job performance — most commonly race, gender, ethnicity, age, or national origin. It is illegal under U.S. federal law (the Equal Pay Act of 1963 and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964) but persists in measurable form across the labor market.
Economists distinguish between:
- Raw wage gap: the total difference in median wages between groups (includes composition effects — differences in occupation, education, experience)
- Adjusted wage gap: the remaining difference after controlling for all measured productivity-relevant factors — the portion attributable to discrimination in a narrow sense
The Bureau of Labor Statistics Highlights of Women's Earnings documents the raw gap by occupation, education, and industry. The adjusted gap — accounting for detailed occupational controls — is estimated at 5–8 cents per dollar in recent research.
Why it works this way
Economist Gary Becker's model of taste-based discrimination holds that some employers are willing to pay a cost (foregone profit) to indulge a prejudice against hiring or promoting certain groups. In competitive markets, non-discriminating employers have a cost advantage — they can hire the discriminated-against workers at below-market wages and profit from the wage suppression. Over time, competition should eliminate discriminating employers. But markets have not fully eliminated gaps — suggesting discrimination is persistent, reflecting occupational segregation, implicit bias in hiring and promotion, and information asymmetries that market competition alone does not resolve.
A real example
The Census Bureau's American Community Survey wage data shows that Black male college graduates earn approximately 80 percent of white male college graduates with similar educational credentials. This gap persists even within detailed occupational categories and cannot be fully explained by measurable productivity factors — consistent with persistent wage discrimination supplemented by differential access to high-wage occupations and networks.
Why it matters
Wage discrimination is both a labor market failure (misallocating talent by undervaluing productive workers) and an equity concern. Policy responses include strengthening enforcement of anti-discrimination statutes, pay transparency requirements that make internal pay disparities visible, and addressing occupational segregation through education and pipeline programs. The EEOC enforcement data documents that wage discrimination charges are among the most common employment discrimination complaints — suggesting the legal prohibition alone is insufficient to eliminate the practice.





