Teacher weekly wage penalty exceeds 20% in 36 states: Regression-adjusted estimates by state, pooled CPS data for 2018–2023

State Teacher weekly pay penalty
Colorado -38.4%
Arizona -32.9%
Virginia -32.0%
Oklahoma -31.8%
New Hampshire -31.6%
Minnesota -31.0%
Alabama -31.0%
Oregon -29.4%
Georgia -29.3%
Missouri -28.6%
Washington -28.0%
Utah -27.8%
Maryland -27.8%
Tennessee -27.6%
Idaho -27.1%
Louisiana -27.0%
Kansas -25.3%
North Carolina -25.0%
Kentucky -25.0%
Arkansas -24.5%
Wisconsin -24.3%
Texas -24.0%
Nebraska -23.8%
Illinois -23.6%
North Dakota -22.9%
Indiana -22.8%
Michigan -22.6%
Florida -21.9%
Connecticut -21.7%
Maine -21.0%
Montana -20.8%
District of Columbia -20.7%
New Mexico -20.6%
West Virginia -20.5%
California -20.4%
Nevada -20.1%
Massachusetts -19.9%
Iowa -18.6%
Pennsylvania -18.1%
Hawaii -17.8%
South Dakota -17.5%
Alaska -17.5%
Ohio -16.0%
New York -15.6%
Vermont -14.4%
Mississippi -14.0%
Delaware -12.3%
New Jersey -11.5%
South Carolina -10.5%
Rhode Island -9.7%
Wyoming -9.0%
Economic Policy Institute

Notes: Figure shows state-specific regression-adjusted weekly wage penalties for public school teachers (elementary, middle, and secondary) relative to their college-educated, nonteaching peers. See Allegretto and Mishel 2019, Appendix A, for more details on data and methodology.

Figure reports state-specific regression-adjusted teacher weekly wage penalties: how much less, in percentage terms, public school teachers (elementary, middle, and secondary) earn in weekly wages relative to their college-educated, nonteaching peers. College-educated workers refers to workers who have a bachelor’s degree or more education. The dependent variable is (log) weekly wages with indicator controls on public school teacher, public school teacher interacted with each state (relevant estimate), private school teacher, gender, and married, along with indicator sets on education (M.A., professional degree, Ph.D.) and race/ethnicity (Black, Hispanic, other); also included are age as a quartic, state fixed effects. See Allegretto and Mishel 2019, Appendix A, for more details on data and methodology.

Source: Author’s analysis of pooled 2018-2023 Current Population Survey Outgoing Rotation Group data accessed via the EPI Current Population Survey Extracts, Version Version 1.0.53 (EPI 2024a), https://microdata.epi.org.

View the underlying data on epi.org.