New report details skilled trades earning, difference between men and women
OTTAWA — A new report finds that women in the skilled trades earn about half what men do, because they’re concentrated in lower-paying fields.
The report from the Labour Market Information Council looks specifically at those who received their certifications over a decade ago in 2009, and follows their annual earnings through to 2017.
Researchers found that those in the “Red Seal” trades, which are those that have national standards, started out making $64,000 in their first years and those incomes grew on average 2.1 per cent annually over the eight-year study period to reach $73,800.
Women’s annual earnings across all of those 56 trades was about half of men, partly a function of the low-paying trades where women were concentrated, such as cooking, baking and hairstyling.