This article examines the effect of total war on inequalities in pay in munitions industries in Britain during World War Two. I present new data derived from Ministry of Labour monthly reports of changes in wage-rates, which allows for a systematic analysis of pay inequality by skill category and by gender and age. I also investigate changes in earnings equality using data derived from Earnings and Hours Enquiries and from records of the National Arbitration Tribunal. I conclude that pay differentials defined by skill, gender or age narrow considerably during World War Two. For men, the War represented an accentuation of a trend towards greater levelling that commenced in the later part of the 1930s and continued in the immediate post-war y...
We provide estimates of comparative real wages of German and British full-time equivalent workers fo...
This paper adds to the literature on the relationship between military service and long-term real ea...
This article presents new evidence on the determinants of short-time working in Britain during the i...
This article reviews the evidence pertaining to changes in Womens relative pay during the War and pr...
This study challenges the use of the gross increase in female participation rate--prewar to postwar-...
The 1940's were a turning point in married women's labor force participation, leading many to credit...
This article presents a study on the quantification of the level of occupational access and wage dis...
During the 1940s, the diversion of 55% of the workforce to wartime production, the induction of over...
After closing dramatically during World War Two the gender wage gap (GWG) was roughly constant in th...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
Abstract: Although there was a ‘massive rise ’ in British wage inequality, relatively little is know...
Based on detailed payroll data of blue collar male and female labor in Britain's engineering and met...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
We provide estimates of comparative real wages of German and British full-time equivalent workers fo...
This paper adds to the literature on the relationship between military service and long-term real ea...
This article presents new evidence on the determinants of short-time working in Britain during the i...
This article reviews the evidence pertaining to changes in Womens relative pay during the War and pr...
This study challenges the use of the gross increase in female participation rate--prewar to postwar-...
The 1940's were a turning point in married women's labor force participation, leading many to credit...
This article presents a study on the quantification of the level of occupational access and wage dis...
During the 1940s, the diversion of 55% of the workforce to wartime production, the induction of over...
After closing dramatically during World War Two the gender wage gap (GWG) was roughly constant in th...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
This article examines the attempts by the Dundee jute industry to recruit women workers in the years...
Abstract: Although there was a ‘massive rise ’ in British wage inequality, relatively little is know...
Based on detailed payroll data of blue collar male and female labor in Britain's engineering and met...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
We provide estimates of comparative real wages of German and British full-time equivalent workers fo...
This paper adds to the literature on the relationship between military service and long-term real ea...
This article presents new evidence on the determinants of short-time working in Britain during the i...