The wage gap is smaller for female teachers in a union: Wage gap between female public school teachers and similar female workers, by union status, 1996–2015

Year Union Non-union
1996 -4.8239% -15.1142%
1997 -3.1197% -16.1238%
1998 -4.6490% -16.7834%
1999 -4.8905% -18.0698%
2000 -7.6943% -16.0569%
2001 -6.5381% -19.8071%
2002 -7.8680% -19.9737%
2003 -8.2807% -17.7961%
2004 -8.2197% -16.9125%
2005 -8.7760% -19.8453%
2006 -8.3984% -23.0571%
2007 -7.0411% -18.4240%
2008 -8.8047% -18.8815%
2009 -8.0873% -17.0013%
2010 -6.7949% -16.0536%
2011 -7.5807% -18.8937%
2012 -6.5180% -21.2190%
2013 -8.0988% -22.0175%
2014 -10.3119% -20.8320%
2015 -13.1726% -22.3684%

Note: Figure compares weekly wages. Regression-adjusted estimates include controls for age (quartic), education, race/ethnicity, geographical region, marital status, and gender for the pooled sample. Data are for workers age 18–64 with positive wages (excluding self-employed workers). Union representation is defined as being a union member or being covered by a union contract.

Source: Authors' analysis of Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group data

View the underlying data on epi.org.