Yes. You will have some written materials that give numbers and spell it out, but I'll go through it orally.
Think of it this way. Say somebody gives you $100 and says, “Here, we're giving this to you because you're a woman and we know you need more money.” Then they turn around and give $1,000 to a man and say, “Here, we're giving you $1,000. We know you make more income, so for this gift of money to have any impact on you, we need to give you more.” And you both say, “Thank you.”
Now you say, “But wait a minute, he's a man and he got $1,000. That's more than I got.” And the giver, the giftor, says, “No, no, you got more. You got proportionately more, expressed as a percentage of your income, which is lower.” Let's say your income is $1,000 a year. So you got a 10% gift.
Then you say, “But still, $1,000 is worth a lot more than $100.” And the giver says, “No, but the man we gave this to has an income of $100,000. So proportionately you got more because $1,000 is only 1% of $100,000.”
So you're supposed to say, “Oh, right, 10% of my little income is more than 1% of his big income.” That's what I mean.