Eh, this data's pretty useless. There's no statistical analysis to characterize the data and tell me what it means. At Google, for instance, women start at a higher base salary (~$4,000 difference) but men earn up to $25,000 more as Senior Software Engineers. Both of those seem like pretty significant differences, but I don't know whether its indicative of a trend. Furthermore, confounders like maternity leave haven't been taken into consideration.
LordT
Date_Posted: 2014-11-26 15:41:43
That being the case, the argument for or against one making more than the other are both invalid.
Date_Posted: 2014-11-26 13:30:51
Eh, this data's pretty useless. There's no statistical analysis to characterize the data and tell me what it means. At Google, for instance, women start at a higher base salary (~$4,000 difference) but men earn up to $25,000 more as Senior Software Engineers. Both of those seem like pretty significant differences, but I don't know whether its indicative of a trend. Furthermore, confounders like maternity leave haven't been taken into consideration.
Date_Posted: 2014-11-26 15:41:43
That being the case, the argument for or against one making more than the other are both invalid.