Empirical evidence has shown that married men generally earn more and married women earn less than their unmarried counterparts. However, the control group of “not married” differs between studies, over time and between countries, such that the message remains somewhat fuzzy. It is not clear whether the type of union or the fact of being in a union is responsible for these wage penalties and premiums. This article aims to analyze whether marriage pays more than cohabitation in a country such as France, where cohabiting and married partnerships have both coexisted for years. Thanks to a rich dataset with information on both the marital and work history of both partners, we are able to estimate the effect on hourly wages of being married rela...
In this paper, we use EUROMOD, the tax-benefit microsimulation model of the European Union, to inves...
Female specialization on household work and male specialization on labor-market work is a widely obs...
We examine changes in marriage and earnings patterns across four cohorts born between 1936 and 1975 ...
Empirical evidence has shown that married men generally earn more and married women earn less than t...
Empirical research has unambiguously shown that married men receive higher wages than unmarried, whe...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This article investigates how marriage affects the wages of men in Germany. A variety of reasons hav...
article published in law reviewEmpirical research has consistently shown that married men have subst...
There is a growing tendency to see cohabitation as an equivalent alternative to marriage, and this a...
The male marital wage premium is the wage difference between married and unmarried men. This paper e...
This paper provides new evidence on wage premiums for men in relation to marriage and cohabitation. ...
The phenomenon that married men earn higher average wages than unmarried men, the so-called marriage...
This study reconsiders the phenomenon that married men earn more money than unmarried men, a key res...
BACKGROUND—Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, have greater incentives ...
In Western countries, the distribution of relative incomes within marriages tends to be skewed in a ...
In this paper, we use EUROMOD, the tax-benefit microsimulation model of the European Union, to inves...
Female specialization on household work and male specialization on labor-market work is a widely obs...
We examine changes in marriage and earnings patterns across four cohorts born between 1936 and 1975 ...
Empirical evidence has shown that married men generally earn more and married women earn less than t...
Empirical research has unambiguously shown that married men receive higher wages than unmarried, whe...
A longstanding and yet unsettled question in labor economics is: does marriage cause men's wages to ...
This article investigates how marriage affects the wages of men in Germany. A variety of reasons hav...
article published in law reviewEmpirical research has consistently shown that married men have subst...
There is a growing tendency to see cohabitation as an equivalent alternative to marriage, and this a...
The male marital wage premium is the wage difference between married and unmarried men. This paper e...
This paper provides new evidence on wage premiums for men in relation to marriage and cohabitation. ...
The phenomenon that married men earn higher average wages than unmarried men, the so-called marriage...
This study reconsiders the phenomenon that married men earn more money than unmarried men, a key res...
BACKGROUND—Women, who generally do more unpaid and less paid work than men, have greater incentives ...
In Western countries, the distribution of relative incomes within marriages tends to be skewed in a ...
In this paper, we use EUROMOD, the tax-benefit microsimulation model of the European Union, to inves...
Female specialization on household work and male specialization on labor-market work is a widely obs...
We examine changes in marriage and earnings patterns across four cohorts born between 1936 and 1975 ...