Joanna Dressel, Paul Attewell, Liza Reisel, Kjersti Misje Østbakken
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Explanations for the persistent pay disparity between similarly qualified men and women vary between women’s different and devalued work characteristics and specific processes that result in unequal wage returns to the same characteristics. This article investigates how the gender wage gap is affected by gender differences in detailed work activities among full-time, year-round, college-graduate workers in the US using decomposition analysis in the National Survey of College Graduates. Differences in men’s and women’s characteristics account for a majority of the gender wage gap. Additionally, men and women receive different returns to several characteristics: occupational composition, marriage and work activities. While men are penalized more than women for having teaching as their primary work activity, women receive lower rewards for primary work activities such as finance and computer programming. The findings suggest that even with men and women becoming more similar on several characteristics, unequal returns to those characteristics will stall progress towards equality.
对于同等资历的男女之间持续存在的薪酬差距,有不同的解释,包括女性不同的、被贬低的工作特征,以及导致相同特征产生不平等工资回报的具体过程。本文通过对《全国大学毕业生调查》(National Survey of College Graduates)的分解分析,研究了在美国全职、全年工作的大学毕业生中,详细工作活动的性别差异对男女工资差距的影响。男性和女性的特征差异是造成性别工资差距的主要原因。此外,男性和女性在职业构成、婚姻和工作活动等几个特征上获得了不同的回报。男性因以教学为主要工作活动而受到的惩罚比女性多,而女性因从事金融和计算机编程等主要工作活动而获得的回报较低。研究结果表明,即使男性和女性在一些特征上变得更加相似,这些特征的不平等回报也会阻碍实现平等的进程。
期刊介绍:
Work, Employment and Society (WES) is a leading international peer reviewed journal of the British Sociological Association which publishes theoretically informed and original research on the sociology of work. Work, Employment and Society covers all aspects of work, employment and unemployment and their connections with wider social processes and social structures. The journal is sociologically orientated but welcomes contributions from other disciplines which addresses the issues in a way that informs less debated aspects of the journal"s remit, such as unpaid labour and the informal economy.