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Employers in some fields may give extra financial incentives
to young black women, who graduate from college at higher
rates than young black men, said Roderick Harrison,
a researcher at the Joint Center for Political and Economic
Studies, a think tank that studies minority issues.
``Given
the relative scarcity, if you are a woman in the sciences
_ if you are a black woman _ you would be a rare commodity,''
Harrison said.
Because
study in the area is limited, it is hard to pinpoint
specific reasons, said Barbara Gault, research director
at the Washington-based Institute for Women's Policy
Research.
``It
could be the fields that educated black women are choosing,''
she said. ``It also could be related to the important
role that black women play in the total family income
in African-American families.
Notions
that black women are struggling financially as much
other groups are should not be dismissed, Gault added.
For
instance, nearly 39 percent of families headed by a
single black woman were in poverty, compared with 21
percent of comparable white women, according to census
estimates released last year.
A
white male with a college diploma earns far more than
any similarly educated man or woman _ in excess of $66,000
a year, according to the Census Bureau. Among men with
bachelor's degrees, Asians earned more than $52,000
a year, Hispanics earned $49,000 and blacks earned more
than $45,000.
Workplace
discrimination and the continuing difficulties of minorities
to get into higher-paying management positions could
help explain the disparities among men, experts say.
Demographics
may offer an explanation: There are millions more college-educated
white men in better paying jobs than there are black,
Hispanic or Asian men.
Minorities
also suffered more financially as a result of the 2001
recession and its aftermath, as has been the case with
past economic downturns, said Jared Bernstein, chief
economist with the Economic Policy Institute.
The
figures come from the Census Bureau's annual look at
educational achievement in America, culled from a survey
in March 2004. Questions about income were asked for
the previous calendar year.
Regardless
of race or gender, a college graduate on average earned
over $51,000, compared with $28,000 for someone with
only a high school diploma or an equivalent degree.
College-educated men typically made $63,000, compared
with $33,000 for men with just a high school education.
Among
women, a college graduate earned more than $38,000,
compared with nearly $22,000 for a high school graduate.
The
data also showed that:
_The
percentage of people age 25 and older who completed
at least four years of college rose again in 2004, to
27.7 percent, compared with 27.2 percent in 2003. There
were increases in all race and ethnic categories.
_About
29 percent of all men in the same age category finished
four years of college, compared with 26 percent of women.
_The
gap between men and women has narrowed since the 1970s
as younger, more educated women steadily replace older,
less-educated women in the work force. For example,
among 25- to 29-year-olds, more than 31 percent of women
have finished at least four years of college, compared
with 26 percent of men.
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On
the Net:
Census
Bureau: http://www.census.gov
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