Even though women today constitute the majority of higher education graduates, they still earn considerably less than their male counterparts. Previous research demonstrates that occupational sex segregation is important for understanding the gender wage gap, since occupations dominated by women pay less; yet less is known about why this is the case. This article explores two possible mechanisms: the devaluation of ‘female-typical’ work tasks and working-time arrangements. Hypotheses are tested by applying OLS regression and Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition analyses to the log hourly wages of a representative sample of German higher education graduates from 2001. Results confirm that occupational overtime increases and occupational part-time wo...
This paper analyses the extent to which gender differences in human capital contribute to explaining...
The closing of the gender wage gap is an ongoing phenomenon in industrialized countries. However, re...
I provide evidence that task use at work by men and women in the same occupations is significantly d...
Even though women today constitute the majority of higher education graduates, they still earn consi...
The gender segregation of occupations is an enduring feature of the labour market, and pay in female...
Female-dominated occupations are poorly paid, but there is disagreement about why. Sociological expl...
In the past four decades, women have made major inroads into occupations previously dominated by men...
In this article I analyze the changes in the gender wage gap in the western region, eastern region a...
The performance of men and women in the labour market has converged enormously in the last decades, ...
In the search for an explanation of wage inequalities between men and women, it is often argued that...
This study analyzes the relationship between the segregation of women across establishments and the ...
Research from the United States consistently shows that female-dominated occupations generally yield...
The aim of this paper is to analyse the relationship between wages and the fraction of women in an o...
This paper analyses the extent to which gender differences in human capital contribute to explaining...
This study analyzes the relationship between the segregation of women across establishments and the ...
This paper analyses the extent to which gender differences in human capital contribute to explaining...
The closing of the gender wage gap is an ongoing phenomenon in industrialized countries. However, re...
I provide evidence that task use at work by men and women in the same occupations is significantly d...
Even though women today constitute the majority of higher education graduates, they still earn consi...
The gender segregation of occupations is an enduring feature of the labour market, and pay in female...
Female-dominated occupations are poorly paid, but there is disagreement about why. Sociological expl...
In the past four decades, women have made major inroads into occupations previously dominated by men...
In this article I analyze the changes in the gender wage gap in the western region, eastern region a...
The performance of men and women in the labour market has converged enormously in the last decades, ...
In the search for an explanation of wage inequalities between men and women, it is often argued that...
This study analyzes the relationship between the segregation of women across establishments and the ...
Research from the United States consistently shows that female-dominated occupations generally yield...
The aim of this paper is to analyse the relationship between wages and the fraction of women in an o...
This paper analyses the extent to which gender differences in human capital contribute to explaining...
This study analyzes the relationship between the segregation of women across establishments and the ...
This paper analyses the extent to which gender differences in human capital contribute to explaining...
The closing of the gender wage gap is an ongoing phenomenon in industrialized countries. However, re...
I provide evidence that task use at work by men and women in the same occupations is significantly d...