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An analysis performed by the New York Times of internal pay data at cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase unveiled disparities in salaries, showing their women and Black employees were underpaid.
Coinbase Underpaid Women and Black Employees, Claims NYT Study
According to the report, women employees were paid by Coinbase an average of $13,000, or 8%, which is less than menâs employees at comparable job roles within the crypto exchange. The data gathered by the NYT includes pay details of 830 employees at the end of 2018.
As per an alleged unfair treatment of Black employees in terms of compensation, the figures showed that 16 salaried workers were paid $11,500, or 7%, less than all other employees in similar jobs, said the New York Times article.
The analysis, performed by Alexandra Marr, an economist specialized in statistical analysis for court cases involving pay bias, revealed that the gap between white and Black employees grew to 11%.
The NYT claimed they confirmed the accuracy of the study with nine employees included in the data collected, âand colleagues they knew.â
As per the dimension of the salary disparities in Coinbase, NYTâs article said:
The pay disparities at Coinbase appear to be much larger than those in the tech industry as a whole, and at the few other tech companies that have had to release data.
Coinbaseâs Reaction to the NYT Article
Right after the New York Times published the study, U.S.-based crypto exchange issued a statement, signed by L.J. Brock, Coinbaseâs chief people officer, pointing out that the company âis committed to fair and equitable compensation for every employee.â In fact, the statement is an internal email sent by Coinbase to their employees on December 29, 2020.
One of the statementâs excerpts reads as follow:
Coinbase is committed to ruthlessly eliminating bias in all our internal processes. We also recognize that it is best practice to regularly check our work, and while pay equity is critical at any stage of maturation, we believe that we have implemented the framework to ensure we are driving equitable outcomes. We recently retained a certified woman-owned law firm to partner with an expert software solution, Syndio, to audit our global pay data. We will examine our pay through the lens of ethnicity/race, in addition to gender.
There are also supporters of Coinbase in the controversy, such as Balaji S. Srinivasan, an angel investor, entrepreneur, and former Coinbaseâs CTO, who said that âno oneâ can trust in the data analysis published by the author of the article, NYTâs tech reporter Nathaniel Popper, alleging that most of the executives at the crypto exchange âare women and people of color.â
However, this is not the first time that Coinbase is under a similar controversy. In fact, the NYT also published a report on November 27, 2020, that revealed Coinbase has been facing âmany internal complaints about discriminatory treatmentâ with black employees.
What are your thoughts on the Coinbaseâs controversy about the alleged disparities in salaries? Let us know in the comments section below.
The post NYT Study: Coinbase Underpaid Female and Black Employees at Much Larger Rates Than Those in the Technology Industry appeared first on Bitcoin News.
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