Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees, but also for those in full-time, continuous careers. In data from cohort studies, the gender wage gap for full time workers in their early thirties fell between 1978 and 2000. This equalisation reflects improvements in women’s education and experience, rather more than a move towards equal treatment. Indeed, had the typical woman full-timer in 2000 been paid at men’s rates she would have actually received higher pay than the typical man. Women in one cohort faced increasing inequality as they aged from 33 to 42, partly due to differences in qualifications and experience. However, unequal treatment also rose among women employed full-time at ...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a representative, longitudinal an...
Using data tracking all those born in a single week in Great Britain in 1958 through to their mid-50...
In the UK the gender pay gap on entry to the labour market is approximately zero but after ten years...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
This paper analyses the pay gap between men and women in the two British birth cohort studies using ...
Heather Joshi’s presentation to the UCL Institute of Clinical Trials and Methodology, 7th June 2021
We trace the gender wage gap (GWG) though a mid‐life peak for a cohort born in Britain in 1958 (NCDS...
This paper compares the gender gap in the pay of British, full-time workers from two cohorts, born i...
This paper analyses gender wage differentials in full-time employment using recently released data f...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
Most studies of the gender pay gap use cross-section earnings functions to apply a Oaxaca decomposit...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a representative, longitudinal an...
Using data tracking all those born in a single week in Great Britain in 1958 through to their mid-50...
In the UK the gender pay gap on entry to the labour market is approximately zero but after ten years...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
Gender pay differences are not merely a problem for women returning to work and part-time employees,...
This paper analyses the pay gap between men and women in the two British birth cohort studies using ...
Heather Joshi’s presentation to the UCL Institute of Clinical Trials and Methodology, 7th June 2021
We trace the gender wage gap (GWG) though a mid‐life peak for a cohort born in Britain in 1958 (NCDS...
This paper compares the gender gap in the pay of British, full-time workers from two cohorts, born i...
This paper analyses gender wage differentials in full-time employment using recently released data f...
This article examines the wage growth of British men and women between the ages of 33 and 42 who wer...
This paper examines trends in the labour market position of British women and men from 1972 to 2004,...
Most studies of the gender pay gap use cross-section earnings functions to apply a Oaxaca decomposit...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This paper disaggregates the pay gap between men and women into four possible ‘barriers’: access to ...
This study reports novel facts about the UK gender pay gap. We use a representative, longitudinal an...
Using data tracking all those born in a single week in Great Britain in 1958 through to their mid-50...
In the UK the gender pay gap on entry to the labour market is approximately zero but after ten years...