Using consistently estimated occupational, wage, and hours equations, we calculate earnings differentials by gender, race, and ethnicity. For example, if the market treated women like men, the average women would have earned $133 more per week so that American women would have earned $338 billion more per year. We decompose the earnings differential into wage, hours, and occupational effects. Occupational segregation explains little of the earnings differential for women, but roughly a fifth of the differential for black and Hispanic men. For all groups, within-occupation wage discrimination is responsible for most of the earnings differential
The earnings gap between men and women, an apt indicator of women's status relative to men's, was ro...
Wages for Hispanic females lag behind those of their male counterparts, and behind While males and f...
Thesis (M.A)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Sociology"Dec...
Using consistently estimated occupational, wage, and hours equations, we calculate earnings differen...
There are sizeable earnings differentials by both gender and race in the U.S. labor market, with wom...
The Equal Pay Act of 1964, Title VII of the Civil Right’s Act of 1964 and other pieces of legislatio...
Most Americans have heard of the gender pay gap and the statistic that, today, women earn on average...
Previous research on gender issues in the labor force has concluded that there still remains a dispa...
Using family income as a class measure, we explore whether the gender and racial/ethnic gaps in hour...
The 1989 Labour Market Activity Survey (LMAS) is used to examine the wage implications of membership...
and University of California at Davis, respectively. They wish to acknowledge Nancy Williamson for h...
Even though women today constitute the majority of higher education graduates, they still earn consi...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore an extensive set of determinants of earnings and to offer recen...
When attempting to explain the economics of occupational structure, income servies as the apex of di...
Peer ReviewedThe "comparable worth" controversy has raised the issue of the fairness of labor market...
The earnings gap between men and women, an apt indicator of women's status relative to men's, was ro...
Wages for Hispanic females lag behind those of their male counterparts, and behind While males and f...
Thesis (M.A)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Sociology"Dec...
Using consistently estimated occupational, wage, and hours equations, we calculate earnings differen...
There are sizeable earnings differentials by both gender and race in the U.S. labor market, with wom...
The Equal Pay Act of 1964, Title VII of the Civil Right’s Act of 1964 and other pieces of legislatio...
Most Americans have heard of the gender pay gap and the statistic that, today, women earn on average...
Previous research on gender issues in the labor force has concluded that there still remains a dispa...
Using family income as a class measure, we explore whether the gender and racial/ethnic gaps in hour...
The 1989 Labour Market Activity Survey (LMAS) is used to examine the wage implications of membership...
and University of California at Davis, respectively. They wish to acknowledge Nancy Williamson for h...
Even though women today constitute the majority of higher education graduates, they still earn consi...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore an extensive set of determinants of earnings and to offer recen...
When attempting to explain the economics of occupational structure, income servies as the apex of di...
Peer ReviewedThe "comparable worth" controversy has raised the issue of the fairness of labor market...
The earnings gap between men and women, an apt indicator of women's status relative to men's, was ro...
Wages for Hispanic females lag behind those of their male counterparts, and behind While males and f...
Thesis (M.A)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept. of Sociology"Dec...