In the United States and around the world, gender wage inequality 
(GWI) is a timeless issue untouched by modernism, contemporary 
governance, policymakers or social equality affairs. In fact, some 
companies still require their employees to sign a contract agreements 
agreeing not to disclose salaries to prevent legal confrontations, 
internal hurdles or despotism against unhappy employees. However, those 
contracts might be hiding a more significant pressing social problem.
Analysis of academic research, professional reviews and official 
state agencies reporting confirmed that GWI is a problem as congruent 
now as it was decades ago.
In January 2016, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported the 
median weekly earning between men and women was 83 percent, with males 
earning an average of $871 a week while women earn $719.
In the U.S. the BLS reported that 38 percent of women are college 
graduate versus 34.6 percent of men, and 57 percent of the workforce 
population is women. According to Meghan Casserly, a member of the 
Forbes Entrepreneurs Team, women are making $377 less each week than 
their male counterparts. That is an average salary difference of $19, 
604 a year.
In her article, “
The Real Origins of the Gender Pay Gap—And How We Can Turn It Around,” Casserly noted
 that
 yearly, women’s first paychecks will be roughly $7,000 less than their 
male classmates. She further explains that in the private sector, the 
average male’s pay scale was $1,328 per week while women with the same 
professional, educational, experience and capacity earn only $951.
An analysis of the latest BLS report on gender wage based on 
professional fields offers additional insight. For example, in the 
financial sector, women are paid as low as a 54.2 percent of men’s 
salaries. In the legal sector, women are paid 56.7 percent of men’s 
salary.
While academic programs in the U.S. do not separate groundworks and 
achievements by gender, unfortunately, statistics shows the median 
earnings between men and women have a considerable difference furiously 
relinquishing on social equality and opportunities.
Cause and Effect of Gender Wage Inequality
The GWI issue is not only affecting women financially but also their 
leadership empowerment opportunities. In the financial sector, only 18.3
 percent of women hold board directors or relevant positions at their 
workplace. Heather Landy, the editor-in-chief of 
American Banker Magazine,
 wrote that 100 U.S. banks hold assets calculated in more than $10 
billion. However, only five of those banking organizations have females 
in positions of chief executive officers (CEO). Also, in the field of 
technology, only 9 percent of women hold senior manager positions, while
 in politics only 10 percent of women hold governorships.
Landy also explained how a recent strategic study conducted on CEOs 
from 2,500 of the world’s largest companies found that in the past 
decade, 38 percent of personnel fired from their positions were women 
versus 27 percent of men.
Timeless social problem
In 1999, the BLS published a report based on ethnic demographic 
earnings indicating. This report showed the weekly earning wage of white
 men was $615 while white women earned $468. Black men earned $468 while
 Black women earned $400. Hispanic men earned $390 while Hispanic women 
earned $337. The report also showed the GWI, men versus women ratio, was
 an astonishing 76 percent regardless of ethnicities, race, nationality,
 origin or culture.
The GWI and pay inequality is a problem affecting societies since the
 Paleolithic era. The problem surpassed the development of the Old World
 diving into the 21st century without significant changes.
In 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was one of 
the first documents to acknowledge GWI officially around the world. The 
UDHR advocates equal pledge of dignity and human’s rights as common 
standards of achievements. The UDHR also pledged equal autonomy for 
developments and favorable remunerations regardless of the gender. In 
fact, the UDHR states, “Everyone, without discrimination, has the right 
to equal pay for equal work.”
Still, in 2016 social advancements, academic development and 
contemporary modernism do not seem to influence GWI changes. The GWI is a
 social problem intimately associated with a lack of democratic 
governance, diminishing social equality and promoting social imbalance.
Cognitive of a Social Problem
The literature suggested the GWI problem is obstructing organizations
 from empowering leadership strategies and guidance toward women 
development at the workplace. The literature also indicated that issues 
such as gender-discrimination, gender bullying and the lack of 
recognition of women’s performance are significantly reducing equal 
opportunities governances for women at their workplace. Studies showed 
that women and men are equally capable of performance and 
responsibility; therefore, organizations must treat and respect them 
equally.
The United Nations and the organization Women’s Empowerment 
Principles recommended several areas of development essential to empower
 women equality at the workplace:
- Leadership that promotes gender equality, equal opportunity and nondiscriminatory programs.
- Safety, health, violence freedom, training and education.
- Marketing practices, enterprise women development and community and leadership engagement.
- Transparency measurement reporting evaluation strategies toward women development.
Iberkis Faltas, Ph>D., (ABD)