Spotlight | Reviews | Current Issue | Newsletter | Subscribe | Contact |
Departments

Partner Links
Website builder
WinWeb OnlineOffice
Shopping and price comparison with product reviews at dooyoo.co.uk

user friendly

CeBIT 2010

High-class talks around the clock in the Forum, non-commercial projects presenting their work, new developments at the largest IT fair in the world, CeBIT Open Source 2010 in Hanover, Germany.

Visit them in hall 2, March 2-6 or here.

  linux-magazine.com » Online » Blogs » ROSE Blog: Rikk... » Dice 2007 Annual Salary Survey Shows Gender Gap  

ROSE Blog: Rikki's Open Source Exchange
ROSE Blog: Rikki's Open Source Exchange

Dice 2007 Annual Salary Survey Shows Gender Gap

Dice released the results of their 2007 Salary Survey and the good news is that salaries increased for tech professionals. The bad news is that only men enjoyed this increase – women's salaries held steady, increasing the gender gap by 11.9 percent (from 9.7 percent in 2006). According to the survey, "Satisfaction remained high among tech workers: more than 50 percent of respondents are happy with their salaries." I suspect that women who were surveyed are less satisfied after seeing the survey results.

The survey also indicated that the gender gap is smaller among consultants (8.9 percent). Furthermore, "Lower skilled positions such as technical support and systems administrators had a smaller gender gap. Women with 1-5 years of experience saw the smallest gender gap (approximately 2.3 percent) while women with more than 15 years of experience had the largest gap (11.3 percent); hence, women age 40-49 also saw the largest gender gap (16.4 percent)."

I'm still scratching my head about tech support and sys admins being called "lower skilled positions".

Comments

Surprised

Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier Feb 05, 2008 3:54pm GMT

I'm surprised, and not a little disappointed, to see that the disparity is increasing.

Print this page. Recommend
Slashdot it! Delicious Share on Facebook Tweet! Digg

 

In the US and Canada, Linux Magazine is known as Linux Pro Magazine.
Entire contents © 2010 [Linux New Media USA, LLC]
Linux New Media web sites:
North America: [Linux Pro Magazine]
UK/Worldwide: [Linux Magazine]
Germany: [Linux-Magazin] [LinuxUser] [EasyLinux] [Linux-Community] [Linux Technical Review]
Eastern Europe: [Linux Magazine Poland] [Linux Community Poland]
International: [Linux Magazine Brazil] [EasyLinux Brazil] [Linux Magazine Spanish]
Corporate: [Linux New Media AG]