The authors argue that paid providers of care services in the U.S. (in health, education, and social service industries) are less able than providers of business services to capture value-added or to extract rents because limited consumer sovereignty, incomplete information regarding quality, and large positive externalities reduce their relative market power. In addition, many care jobs enforce normative responsibility for others and require specific skills that limit cross industry mobility. Analysis of Current Population Survey data for 2014-2019 reveals significant pay penalties in care services relative to business services, controlling for factors such as gender, education, occupation, and public/private employment. Women’s concentrat...
It is undoubtingly noticeable that care workers' employment rights are currently prominent in the ne...
Despite decades of intervention to promote equal pay, the gender wage gap in Australia persists. A k...
The 1998 New South Wales Pay Equity Inquiry demonstrates some limitations of dominant theoretical ap...
Care occupations are gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, particularly in the United States. ...
Care occupations are gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, particularly in the United States. ...
With the decline of the manufacturing-based economy there is evidence that more men are moving into ...
Recent evidence from the USA suggests that people engaged in occupations involving providing care fo...
Earnings in care services are lower than in other industries, particularly among professional and ma...
Women mainly provide family care, but as women’s economic opportunities increase they will not conti...
Recent evidence from the USA suggests that people engaged in occupations involving providing care fo...
Why do the costs of care tend to rise and how is it possible to account for three relatively univers...
International audienceCare occupations are strongly gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, part...
World-wide, women are less integrated into the labor force than men and if they are, they earn consi...
Female labour force participation has been increasing in recent decades, in part encouraged by state...
Economic discrimination has been a major focus of gender research for the past several decades and s...
It is undoubtingly noticeable that care workers' employment rights are currently prominent in the ne...
Despite decades of intervention to promote equal pay, the gender wage gap in Australia persists. A k...
The 1998 New South Wales Pay Equity Inquiry demonstrates some limitations of dominant theoretical ap...
Care occupations are gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, particularly in the United States. ...
Care occupations are gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, particularly in the United States. ...
With the decline of the manufacturing-based economy there is evidence that more men are moving into ...
Recent evidence from the USA suggests that people engaged in occupations involving providing care fo...
Earnings in care services are lower than in other industries, particularly among professional and ma...
Women mainly provide family care, but as women’s economic opportunities increase they will not conti...
Recent evidence from the USA suggests that people engaged in occupations involving providing care fo...
Why do the costs of care tend to rise and how is it possible to account for three relatively univers...
International audienceCare occupations are strongly gendered and remain relatively poorly paid, part...
World-wide, women are less integrated into the labor force than men and if they are, they earn consi...
Female labour force participation has been increasing in recent decades, in part encouraged by state...
Economic discrimination has been a major focus of gender research for the past several decades and s...
It is undoubtingly noticeable that care workers' employment rights are currently prominent in the ne...
Despite decades of intervention to promote equal pay, the gender wage gap in Australia persists. A k...
The 1998 New South Wales Pay Equity Inquiry demonstrates some limitations of dominant theoretical ap...