Latina Equal Pay Day is an observance and call to action that brings awareness to an issue that affects not just Latinas, but the entire American economy.
The Equal Pay Act passed almost 60 years ago, making it illegal to pay anyone less based on their gender or race. Unfortunately this problem persists, but for Hispanic women in particular, the gap only gets wider.
For a Latina to reach pay parity with a white non-Hispanic man, she would need to work past the age of 90 (6 years beyond her life expectancy). This is obviously unrealistic, which means there is no real way for her to ever catch up!
When I first learned about the pay gap, I was shocked. Growing up in Mexico, we had much more pay transparency with published wage scales, so we all knew how much everyone made.
Superstar employees could always qualify for bonuses, but even those had a clear and transparent way of being measured. When I first came to this country, I was surprised at the secrecy around pay. Thirty years later, it’s disappointing to see how little progress we’ve made.
How the Latina pay gap changed
Latinas have the largest pay gap among women, and sadly, it is the widest gap we’ve ever seen. This year it dropped to $.54 cents to the dollar for all Latina workers and $.49 cents for those in full-time jobs.
According to Monica Ramirez, who founded Justice for Migrant Women, she explained that the disparity accounts for all Latinas with reported earnings:
“We set the date for December 8th because per the 2020 census data, that reflected a $.49 cent to $1 dollar gap – we would not have had a day of action for Latinas in 2022, or ‘best case’ per one calculation, it would have been on New Years Eve. We could not let a year go by without acting as a collective, raising awareness and addressing the solutions … 33 million women’s experiences overall are accounted for. We did not want to erase the experiences of part-time workers, gig workers, seasonal workers, etc. We also can’t appropriately address a problem if we don’t understand its scope.”
To address the scope of this problem, we must acknowledge the economic weight that Latinas bear in order to keep the U.S. economy competitive. Before the pandemic, their numbers in the labor force were projected to grow by almost 26 percent, significantly outpacing that of white women.
Unfortunately, this cohort was devastated by the pandemic, not just among deaths but also in economic hardship. According to the National Women’s Law Center, 324,000 Latinas were forced to leave the workforce in September 2020 – almost three times the rate of white women, and more than four times the rate of Black women. Taken together, Latinas are now on track to lose on average $1.2 million in their productive careers, but in states like California, which has the highest Hispanic population, the loss jumps to $1.8 million.
The gap persists despite education level
For some, unconscious bias might suggest this wage gap persists because Latinas only work in low-wage service jobs, but the disparity actually becomes wider among Latinas with bachelor’s and advanced degrees compared to those with a high school diploma.
The same is true even among the highest paid jobs held by Latinas. For example, those who work in legal occupations make on average $66,201 a year compared to their non-Hispanic white male counterparts who earn $156,908 annually for the same job.









