Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper asks why progress in closing the gender employment rate gap has stalled since the early 1990s. We find that how partner characteristics affected women’s likelihood of employment explain most of the gap’s shift in trend. Instead, changes to the structure of employment both between and within industry sectors impacted the gap at approximately constant rates throughout the period. There is evidence that continuing improvements in women’s employment when they had children or higher qualifications worked towards narrowing the gap, even after progress overall had stalled
Focussing on recent UK graduates, a wage gap of 12% is found. The unexplained component of the gap i...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
This is a report on research undertaken by Professor Wendy Olsen, Dr Vanessa Gash, Sook Kim, and Dr ...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper asks why progress in closing the gender em...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper looks at how the narrowing gender employme...
Alan Manning shows how the economic progress of women has stalled. The evidence from the gender pay ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
After closing dramatically during World War Two the gender wage gap (GWG) was roughly constant in th...
In the UK the gender pay gap on entry to the labour market is approximately zero but after ten years...
Over the past decades the attention devoted to gender discrimination in the labour market by social ...
This paper contributes descriptive evidence on the development of the gender wage gap for different ...
Women in developed economies have made major inroads in labor markets throughout the past century, b...
There is a growing public interest in the differences in labour market behaviour and the treatment ...
We trace the gender wage gap (GWG) though a mid‐life peak for a cohort born in Britain in 1958 (NCDS...
Focussing on recent UK graduates, a wage gap of 12% is found. The unexplained component of the gap i...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
This is a report on research undertaken by Professor Wendy Olsen, Dr Vanessa Gash, Sook Kim, and Dr ...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper asks why progress in closing the gender em...
Using over four decades of British micro data, this paper looks at how the narrowing gender employme...
Alan Manning shows how the economic progress of women has stalled. The evidence from the gender pay ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
After closing dramatically during World War Two the gender wage gap (GWG) was roughly constant in th...
In the UK the gender pay gap on entry to the labour market is approximately zero but after ten years...
Over the past decades the attention devoted to gender discrimination in the labour market by social ...
This paper contributes descriptive evidence on the development of the gender wage gap for different ...
Women in developed economies have made major inroads in labor markets throughout the past century, b...
There is a growing public interest in the differences in labour market behaviour and the treatment ...
We trace the gender wage gap (GWG) though a mid‐life peak for a cohort born in Britain in 1958 (NCDS...
Focussing on recent UK graduates, a wage gap of 12% is found. The unexplained component of the gap i...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
This is a report on research undertaken by Professor Wendy Olsen, Dr Vanessa Gash, Sook Kim, and Dr ...