Gender wage gap persists in Canada, but narrows with education: OECD - Action News
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Gender wage gap persists in Canada, but narrows with education: OECD

The gender wage gap persists in Canada but gets smaller with higher education, the OECD said in a report Friday.

Canadian gender wage gap as wide as 61 per cent for women who lack a high school diploma

The gender wage gap persists in Canada but gets smaller with higher education, the OECD says in a new report.

The research group of wealthy nations published an exhaustive report on education Thursday, looking at the correlation between spending on education and economic outcomes. In its chapter on Canada, the group looked at earnings comparisons between the genders, at different age and education levels.

According to theOrganization for Economic Co-operation and Development's data, women in their prime working years between 25 and 64 who have not completed high school earn 61 per cent of what similarly-educated Canadian men do. That compares with an average of 76 per cent across all 35 wealthy nations that the grouptracks.

But that gap narrows somewhat with more education. "A tertiaryeducated woman earns on average 72 per centof what a similarly educated man earns, which is in line with the OECD average of 73 per cent." Tertiary education is what the OECDcalls any education after the high school level, which is known as secondary education.

Other recentreports from the World Economic Forum, Oxfam, Statistics Canada andthe Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives have foundsimilar evidence that women are chronically underpaid discrepancies that can't be explained away by hours worked, education levels or other lifestyle choices.

Other findings

In other data, Canada had the largest share of adults with post-secondary education but a lower-than-average share of masters and doctoral degrees in 2015.

Last year, 55 per cent of Canadian adults had post-secondary education, the highest share among OECD countries compared to an average of 35 per cent.

Canada also spends more per post-secondary student than almost all of the OECD countries, at US$21,500. That places Canada sixth overall, after Luxembourg, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

With files from The Canadian Press