Weight at Work
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Interesting article:
http://www.salary.com/7-ways-your-looks-affect-your-pay/slide/3/
Weight:
If you’re trying to maximize your paycheck by living large at the office, you’ll have to keep that strictly to a metaphorical sense.
Obese workers (those who have a Body Mass Index of more than 30) are paid less than normal-weight coworkers at a rate of $8,666 a year for obese women, and $4,772 a year for obese men, according to a George Washington University study that cited data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth in 2004. And other studies indicate obese women are even more likely to be discriminated against when it comes to pay, hiring and raises.
A study reported in the International Journal of Obesity described an experiment in which people were shown pictures of job applicants, as well as resumes, and asked to score them on suitability, starting salary, and employability. What the test subjects didn’t realize, however, is the pictures they were being shown were actually of the same person, but before and after bariatric weight loss surgery. Overwhelmingly, the thinner candidates were chosen for the job and with higher starting salaries than the heavier applicants.
http://www.salary.com/7-ways-your-looks-affect-your-pay/slide/3/
Weight:
If you’re trying to maximize your paycheck by living large at the office, you’ll have to keep that strictly to a metaphorical sense.
Obese workers (those who have a Body Mass Index of more than 30) are paid less than normal-weight coworkers at a rate of $8,666 a year for obese women, and $4,772 a year for obese men, according to a George Washington University study that cited data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth in 2004. And other studies indicate obese women are even more likely to be discriminated against when it comes to pay, hiring and raises.
A study reported in the International Journal of Obesity described an experiment in which people were shown pictures of job applicants, as well as resumes, and asked to score them on suitability, starting salary, and employability. What the test subjects didn’t realize, however, is the pictures they were being shown were actually of the same person, but before and after bariatric weight loss surgery. Overwhelmingly, the thinner candidates were chosen for the job and with higher starting salaries than the heavier applicants.
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{popcorn} I'm ready {/popcorn}0
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{popcorn} I'm ready {/popcorn}
It's not that we didn't already know this stuff, but it's interesting to see the numbers behind it.0
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