Good afternoon.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members, for the invitation to today's meeting to discuss gender pay gaps for academic staff at Canadian universities.
In 2021, among all full-time academic staff, the median salary for women was roughly $134,000, while it was $151,000 for men. That's a pay gap of 11.1%. This gap has decreased over time. In 1991, it was 20.6%.
Rank is an important factor to consider when examining the pay gap among academics. Over time, the pay gap has decreased for full professors and associate professors, while it has increased slightly among assistant professors. In 2021, among full professors, men earned 3.3% more than women, compared to 5.9% in 1991. For associate professors, the difference between men and women was 2.3%, compared to 4.8% three decades earlier. The pay gap, although smaller for assistant professors, has increased slightly over the last 30 years, from 2.2% in 1991 to 2.4% in 2021.
We also see differences in the pay gap across teaching disciplines. In 2021, for example, among full professors, women earned slightly more than men in fields such as humanities and health professions and related programs. In most other disciplines, men earned more than women. In business management and public administration, for example, the median salary of men was about $13,300, or 7% higher than that of women.
We know that the age structure of academia has an impact on the gender pay gap. Fifty years ago, only 1% of full-time academic staff were aged 65 years and over. In 2021, this figure was roughly one in 10. This reflects in part the aging of the baby boom generation, as well as the end of mandatory retirement legislation in many provinces. Men are overrepresented in the older age groups, and they are overrepresented among full professors, whose wages are generally highest. This helps explain the overall gender pay gap.
Let me turn now to some steps we're taking to understand the gender pay gap of academics more fully.
Statistics Canada collects data on academic staff through a survey called the university and college academic staff system or UCASS. This survey involves receiving and compiling information from the administrative systems of educational institutions across the country. Currently, information is collected on gender, year of birth, principal subject taught, academic rank, years at rank and salary. UCASS does not include information on racialized groups, indigenous identity or disability status, and does it not collect information on part-time academic staff.
We recognize the importance of gathering more detailed information on equity-seeking groups, as statistical findings for the total population can often hide differences in the experiences of diverse groups. To this end, Statistics Canada is currently assessing the feasibility of enhancing the information included in UCASS. This project has three components.
First, we are evaluating whether information on equity-seeking groups is already held by institutions and the extent to which these data are standardized and comparable across institutions. Secondly, we are assessing whether it would be possible to fill information gaps through the integration of UCASS data with other data already held by Statistics Canada. Third, we are considering what would be involved in Statistics Canada acquiring information on equity-seeking groups from institutions, including important privacy and confidentiality considerations.
This project will be completed in March 2024, and decisions on next steps will be taken at that point.
Mr. Chair, this concludes my opening statement. We would now be happy to answer your questions.