Two central and related questions in economics concern how resources are distributed and why some persons earn more than others. In the labor market, where the buyers are employers and the sellers are workers, exchange occurs when workers "sell" their labor to employers and receive wages or salary in return for the services that they perform. In the United States, economic status varies remarkably along race and gender lines. This paper describes racial differences in three distinct but related dimensions of economic status: earnings, employment status, and wealth. Finally, this paper reviews some explanations economists have offered for these differences and consider the evidence available to support or refute these explanations
This chapter provides an overview of theory and empirical evidence on earnings discrimination within...
Self-employment rates and incomes differ significantly by race. The authors show that these differen...
This study comprises three essays exploring labor market discrimination using new data, a new applic...
White people earn more money than non-whites. This is true in most cases even if non-white people pe...
This chapter summarizes recent research in economics that investigates differentials by race and gen...
The theory of human capital postulates that earnings of different categories of workers, be they mal...
Labor market discrimination is defined as a failure to receive compensation equivalent to workers\u2...
This paper examines the effect of the racial composition of labor markets on wage rates and the raci...
Discrimination in the labour market exists in many forms: the ‘glass ceiling’ ageism, racism, etc. T...
This paper examines the effect of the racial composition of labor markets on wage rates and the raci...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article uses the decomposition analysis developed by Neumark and the 1987 CPS data to investiga...
The economic segmentation literature suggests two mechanisms by which the in-ferior position of mino...
This paper constructs racially and sexually comparative models of labor market entry to assess the e...
Wage discrimination might simply come about when firms offer lower wages to applicants whom they exp...
This chapter provides an overview of theory and empirical evidence on earnings discrimination within...
Self-employment rates and incomes differ significantly by race. The authors show that these differen...
This study comprises three essays exploring labor market discrimination using new data, a new applic...
White people earn more money than non-whites. This is true in most cases even if non-white people pe...
This chapter summarizes recent research in economics that investigates differentials by race and gen...
The theory of human capital postulates that earnings of different categories of workers, be they mal...
Labor market discrimination is defined as a failure to receive compensation equivalent to workers\u2...
This paper examines the effect of the racial composition of labor markets on wage rates and the raci...
Discrimination in the labour market exists in many forms: the ‘glass ceiling’ ageism, racism, etc. T...
This paper examines the effect of the racial composition of labor markets on wage rates and the raci...
In the US labor market the average black worker is exposed to a lower employment rate and earns a lo...
This article uses the decomposition analysis developed by Neumark and the 1987 CPS data to investiga...
The economic segmentation literature suggests two mechanisms by which the in-ferior position of mino...
This paper constructs racially and sexually comparative models of labor market entry to assess the e...
Wage discrimination might simply come about when firms offer lower wages to applicants whom they exp...
This chapter provides an overview of theory and empirical evidence on earnings discrimination within...
Self-employment rates and incomes differ significantly by race. The authors show that these differen...
This study comprises three essays exploring labor market discrimination using new data, a new applic...