Using the Health and Retirement Survey, this paper finds a 16 percent selectivity-corrected wage penalty among women who engage in intermittent labor market activity. This penalty is experienced at a low level of intermittent activity but appears not to play an important role in a woman’s decision to undertake such activity. In addition, employer preferences appear to play a larger role than human capital atrophy in the determination of the wage penalty.
This article updates the 1995 study by Macpherson and Hirsch that used monthly Current Population Su...
This research uses census data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the female labor force...
This paper delves into the well-known phenomenon of shrinking wage elasticities for married women in...
Using the Health and Retirement Survey from the USA, this paper finds a 16% selectivity-corrected wa...
Using the Health and Retirement Survey and standard wage decomposition techniques, this paper finds ...
Comparable worth is designed to raise the earnings of women assumed to be penalized for working in f...
Recent trends in the labor force participation of women have brought much public attention to the is...
This paper assesses the empirical properties of two labor market experience measures for female work...
Many economists have argued that women earn less than men because they work intermittently. Although...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 33-34)."Few women, even today, remain in the labor market fu...
Sex-related wage differentials are almost universal. Economists traditionally tend to attribute a ma...
Taken together, these results suggest that women who drop out of the labor force to raise families c...
This paper addresses two questions: What accounts for the gender gap in labor-market outcomes? What ...
We analyze the role of selection bias in generating the changes in theobserved distribution of femal...
It is widely accepted that there is a penalty associated with intermittent labor force par-ticipatio...
This article updates the 1995 study by Macpherson and Hirsch that used monthly Current Population Su...
This research uses census data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the female labor force...
This paper delves into the well-known phenomenon of shrinking wage elasticities for married women in...
Using the Health and Retirement Survey from the USA, this paper finds a 16% selectivity-corrected wa...
Using the Health and Retirement Survey and standard wage decomposition techniques, this paper finds ...
Comparable worth is designed to raise the earnings of women assumed to be penalized for working in f...
Recent trends in the labor force participation of women have brought much public attention to the is...
This paper assesses the empirical properties of two labor market experience measures for female work...
Many economists have argued that women earn less than men because they work intermittently. Although...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 33-34)."Few women, even today, remain in the labor market fu...
Sex-related wage differentials are almost universal. Economists traditionally tend to attribute a ma...
Taken together, these results suggest that women who drop out of the labor force to raise families c...
This paper addresses two questions: What accounts for the gender gap in labor-market outcomes? What ...
We analyze the role of selection bias in generating the changes in theobserved distribution of femal...
It is widely accepted that there is a penalty associated with intermittent labor force par-ticipatio...
This article updates the 1995 study by Macpherson and Hirsch that used monthly Current Population Su...
This research uses census data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the female labor force...
This paper delves into the well-known phenomenon of shrinking wage elasticities for married women in...