Despite women’s recent gains in education and employment, husbands still tend to out-earn their wives. This article examines the relationship between the partner pay gap, i.e. the difference in earned income between married, co-resident partners, and life satisfaction. Contrary to previous studies, we investigate the effects of recent changes in relative earningswithin couples as well as labour market transitions. Using several waves of the UK Household Longitudinal Study, we reveal that men exhibit an increase in life satisfaction in response to a recent increase in their proportional earnings relative to their wives’ earnings. For women, changes in proportional earnings had no effect on life satisfaction. We also find secondary-earning hu...
The current article aims to explain the interrelationships between the educational attainment of ind...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...
This paper explores earnings inequalities within dual-earner couples in East and West Germany drawin...
Abstract This paper uses recent (mainly 1994) data from the British Household Panel Survey to estima...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
One of the most pressing issues contributing to the persistence of gender inequality is the gendered...
This paper explores earnings inequalities within dual-earner couples in East and West Germany drawin...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
Bertrand, Kamenica and Pan (2015) document that in the United States there is a discontinuity to the...
Constraints that prevent women from working longer hours are argued to be important drivers of the g...
In U.S. Labor Market Challenges Over the Longer Term, labor economist David Autor shows that the f...
This article uses data from the UK Household Longitudinal Study to describe how contemporary British...
Using data in the United States, UK and Germany, we show that women whose working hours exceed those...
The current article aims to explain the interrelationships between the educational attainment of ind...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...
This paper explores earnings inequalities within dual-earner couples in East and West Germany drawin...
Abstract This paper uses recent (mainly 1994) data from the British Household Panel Survey to estima...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
One of the most pressing issues contributing to the persistence of gender inequality is the gendered...
This paper explores earnings inequalities within dual-earner couples in East and West Germany drawin...
Objective: This study examines how the interplay of both partners' employment biographies is associa...
Bertrand, Kamenica and Pan (2015) document that in the United States there is a discontinuity to the...
Constraints that prevent women from working longer hours are argued to be important drivers of the g...
In U.S. Labor Market Challenges Over the Longer Term, labor economist David Autor shows that the f...
This article uses data from the UK Household Longitudinal Study to describe how contemporary British...
Using data in the United States, UK and Germany, we show that women whose working hours exceed those...
The current article aims to explain the interrelationships between the educational attainment of ind...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...
Shifting social norms are leading to changes in family structures. More women are working, and more ...