Women are more likely than men to have a bachelor's degree and a white-collar job. They are also more likely to earn less than male counterparts, finds a new study spanning two generations in the United States.

The scholars analyzed U.S. Census socioeconomic data of more than 180,000 people at two points in time. The study looked at Latino and Asian immigrants in 1980 and then at their children's generation 25 years later (in 2005), as well as non-Hispanic whites whose parents were not immigrants.

In 1980, men led women by a significant margin in bachelor's-degree attainment, white-collar jobs and earnings, the study found. This held true for all three groups: Asians, Latinos and whites.

By 2005, the story had mostly flipped, with women in all three groups overtaking men in bachelor's-degree attainment and white-collar jobs.

But this progress did not translate into women surpassing men's earnings. In 2005, women on average earned $39,472, while men earned $50,900 -- an $11,428 difference between the sexes. The gender earnings gap was largest between white men and women ($14,204) and smallest between Latino men and women ($7,985).

The study also found major gaps between ethnic groups.

Both white men and women, for example, are much more likely to get a bachelor's degree and a white-collar job than Latino men and women. In addition, whites on average earn $6,500 more per year than Latinos.

Stephanie Nawyn, a Michigan State University sociologist and study co-author, said the findings reinforce the existence of a "gender revolution" -- except when it comes to salaries.

"Women have eliminated the gender gap in some respects," Nawyn said. "They now have more college education then men. They have higher occupational status than men. But it's problematic when you realize that women have still not completely closed the earnings gap."

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Michigan State University sociologist Stephanie Nawyn. Credit: Michigan State University

Published in Demography. Source: Michigan State University