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Does the level of occupational aggregation affect estimates of the gender wage gap?

journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-24, 04:39 authored by Mike kiddMike kidd, M Shannon
The traditional decomposition of the gender wage gap distinguishes between a component attributable to gender differences in productivity-related characteristics and a residual component that is often taken as a measure of discrimination. This study of data from the 1989 Canadian Labour Market Activity Survey shows that when occupation is treated as a productivity-related characteristic, the proportion of the gender wage gap labeled explained increases with the number of occupational classifications distinguished. However, on the basis of evidence that occupational differences reflect the presence of barriers faced by women attempting to enter male-dominated occupations, the authors conclude that occupation should not be treated as a productivity-related characteristic; and in a decomposition of the gender wage gap that treats occupation as endogenously determined, they find that the level of occupational aggregation has little effect on the size of the “explained” component of the gap.<p></p>

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Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Journal

Industrial and Labor Relations Review

Volume

49

Pagination

317-329

ISSN

0019-7939

eISSN

2162-271X

Issue

2

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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