The greater job satisfaction reported by female workers represents a puzzle given, on average, their worse labour market outcomes. Using the original data source of Clark (1997), we show that over the last two decades the female satisfaction gap has largely vanished. This reflects a strong secular decline in female job satisfaction. This decline happened for younger women in the 1990s as they aged and because of new female workers in more recent years that have lower job satisfaction than their early 1990s peers. Decompositions make clear that the decline does not reflect deteriorating job characteristics for women but rather their increasingly harsh evaluation of jobs characteristics. These findings fit with the suggestion that women in th...
Although it is generally accepted that women who work part-time are, on average, more satisfied in t...
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 asks why progress in closing the gender em...
Despite being paid less than men and facing worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities ...
Despite being paid less than men and facing worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities ...
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the paradox between high relative levels of job satisfaction and the c...
This paper examines the paradox between high relative levels of job satisfaction and the characteris...
This paper analyses how gender-based disparities in the Euro-Area affect women's job satisfaction u...
This article investigates the apparent paradox of females possessing higher levels of job satisfacti...
This paper investigates six different aspects of job satisfaction by gender over a four year period ...
This article investigates the apparent paradox of females possessing higher levels of job satisfacti...
Although women are paid less than men, face worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities,...
This paper investigates six different aspects of job satisfaction (pay, job security, work, hours, f...
The gender pay gap is a persistent feature of the labour market however evidence indicates that wome...
Pay satisfaction research has suggested that women are more satisfied with their pay than men, even ...
Although it is generally accepted that women who work part-time are, on average, more satisfied in t...
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 asks why progress in closing the gender em...
Despite being paid less than men and facing worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities ...
Despite being paid less than men and facing worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities ...
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the paradox between high relative levels of job satisfaction and the c...
This paper examines the paradox between high relative levels of job satisfaction and the characteris...
This paper analyses how gender-based disparities in the Euro-Area affect women's job satisfaction u...
This article investigates the apparent paradox of females possessing higher levels of job satisfacti...
This paper investigates six different aspects of job satisfaction by gender over a four year period ...
This article investigates the apparent paradox of females possessing higher levels of job satisfacti...
Although women are paid less than men, face worse working conditions, lower promotion opportunities,...
This paper investigates six different aspects of job satisfaction (pay, job security, work, hours, f...
The gender pay gap is a persistent feature of the labour market however evidence indicates that wome...
Pay satisfaction research has suggested that women are more satisfied with their pay than men, even ...
Although it is generally accepted that women who work part-time are, on average, more satisfied in t...
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 asks why progress in closing the gender em...