Women pay a small 'pink tax' for products. Here's how it affects low-income women in New York.

Buying something small, like a razor in a drug store, can sometimes be more expensive based on something like its color, namely pink. New York's Department of Consumer Affairs says women pay almost 10 percent more for a host of products. At a local store, a pink razor that is identical in quality to a blue one costs about 11 percent more on average. In a series on the women's movement, WFUV looks into the so-called "pink tax" in New York.
 
Listen to the story in the link below. 

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