Women have higher graduation rates than men at all academic levels and by 2019 they are projected to account for 60 percent of all American undergraduates. In 2009, they accounted for more than half of all people employed in management and professional occupations.

But at all levels of education, women still earn only 75 percent of what men earn.

Those are among the nuggets contained in a new statistical compendium, Women in America, released on Tuesday by the White House. Obama administration officials say it is the first comprehensive look at the status of women in America since the Kennedy administration released a similar report in 1963.

White House officials concede there is nothing new in the report. Rather, it is a compilation of data that paints a statistical portrait of changes in the social and economic lives of women over the past several decades. Valerie Jarrett, the president’s senior adviser and chairwoman of the White House Council on Women and Girls, said administration officials would use the document to guide policy-making.

New or not, for those who follow societal trends, the report contains interesting charts and tidbits, offering a kind of one-stop shopping for data on women.

It notes, for instance, that women are more likely to live alone than men, are less likely than in the past to suffer from violent crimes — including homicide — and continue to live longer than men. But the life expectancy gap is decreasing. And as they grow older, women are 40 percent more likely than men to report difficulty walking, a major indicator of general good health.

Isabel Sawhill, who co-directs the Center on Children and Families at The Brookings Institution, a research organization here, said she viewed the document as a ‘’wake-up call’’ – a reminder that “despite tremendous educational progress and their large scale entry into the workforce’’ women are still lagging behind men when it comes to their paychecks.

You can find the full report here: //www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/rss_viewer/Women_in_America.pdf