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An American woman has won the Nobel Prize in economics for her work studying the economic lives of American women.
How poetic is that?
No less poetic: Harvard Prof. Claudia Goldin, 77, is the only woman ever to have received the award by herself, with no (male) collaborators.
In her work, Goldin has tried to explain why the wage gap between men and women has persisted, and why women so often are discouraged when it comes to pursuing more advanced job opportunities.
"Women are now more educated than men," Goldin told the Associated Press on Monday, after she'd won the prize. "They graduate from college at much higher rates than men. They do better in high school than men do. So why are there these differences?"
To answer that, she has delved into 200 years of data about women in the workforce, discovering all kinds of surprising things along the way.