We
are excited to share this great news from our partner school, the McCombs
School of Business at The University of Texas! The Texas MBA Class of 2012 have
closed the gender pay gap, earning larger salaries on average than the men from
their class.
Texas MBA Women Beat the Gender Pay Gap for the First Time
by Renee Hopkins
Stacey
Rudnick is not often surprised by data. But she was both thrilled and surprised
recently by data indicating that women from the Texas MBA Class of 2012 have
closed the gender pay gap, earning larger salaries on average than the men from
their class.
“I
had to look at the numbers twice,” said Rudnick, who is Director of Career
Management at McCombs. But subsequent viewing proved her right – the
average post-graduate base pay for class of 2012 women is $106,073, compared to
$104,631 for men from the same class.
“This
is new. We have seen women’s salaries coming out of B-school get closer and
closer to men’s since 2010,” said Rudnick, “but last year there was still a
$2,500 wage gap in base salary for women. It is wonderful to see that gap
closed.”
According
to an October study by the American Association of University Women, a woman
one year out of college earns 82 cents for every dollar made by a man one year
out of college. The study, which received wide media coverage, notes that women
might make different career choices if they knew just how costly their job
preferences may turn out.
Business
school offers women two significant benefits that are difficult to replicate
otherwise, said Rudnick. One is the benefit of belonging to a peer group that
can be tapped for future business partnerships, support and ideas.
The
other is the chance business school offers women to compete and learn in a less
risky environment than on-the-job. “In business school,” she said, “women can
check out which careers might be the best fit while stretching outside their
comfort zones academically and personally through case challenges, take
leadership positions within the school, take rigorous courses, or try work in a
new industry.”
Business
school may also offer women more opportunities to advance than they can create
for themselves by simply trying to move up the ladder at their current jobs, or
change careers. According to Rudnick, business school offers women a “better
chance to make the type of change in one’s career that can be difficult to
accomplish quickly within your existing firm.”
One
reason Texas MBA women may have closed the pay gap is that “we have such strong
women leaders at McCombs,” explained Rudnick. For example, “while women
comprise 28 percent of the class of 2013, they hold 38 percent of the
leadership positions in elected or selective organizations within the school.”
It
should be noted that business school holds the same opportunities and benefits
for men as well as women. Both men and women in the class of 2012 received
post-MBA salaries that were more than a 60 percent increase over their pre-MBA
salaries.
However,
the class of 2012 women increased their pre-MBA average salary of $60,792 by 74
percent, while the men earned a 63 percent increase over their average pre-MBA
salary of $64,047.
“Business
school may offer an unprecedented opportunity to level the playing field for
women,” said Rudnick. “It’s a place where women can more easily be recognized
and recruited by organizations based on their skill set and contributions as
future leaders.”
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