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What is discrimination?

What is discrimination?.

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What is discrimination?

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  1. What is discrimination? Consider the case of a taxi driver who is driving down a street at night in a dangerous part of town and is hailed simultaneously by people on each side of the street. It is equally easy for him to pick up either customer. On the left side of the street is a little old lady. On the right side is a tall African-American teenage boy wearing a hood. The taxi driver unhesitatingly chooses the little old lady over the teenager. Did he discriminate? Is he prejudiced? “Some cabdrivers and taxi industry representatives assert that cab drivers bypassing blacks is not prejudice, but largely a precautionary response to cab driver concerns about being robbed. But black Americans know from bitter experience that it happens all too often to all sorts of African Americans and Hispanic Americans---males and females, young and old, those dressed casually and those dressed in business and even evening wear---who clearly have nothing more in mind than using a taxi to get where they're going. They know that all too often it's not the cab driver's fear of being robbed, it's the cab driver's prejudice that's responsible.” —Hugh B. Price, President, National Urban League
  2. Discrimination: Treating people differently on the basis of their membership in a class Discrimination need not imply racism, sexism, or prejudice. Prejudice: dislike, distaste, or misperception based on innate characteristics such as race or sex Prejudice can but need not generate discrimination.
  3. What is labor market discrimination? Employer decisions that treat identical workers or applicants differently because of characteristics unrelated to their individual productivity. Panera’s Bread: “If you pay attention to the girls waiting on you at the registers, though, you might notice some trends: first, they’re all girls between the ages of 16 and 24. Second, with rare exception, they’re all white.” —Anna Walsh, “Panera Bread’s racist, sexist practices warrant boycott,” The Tartan, 12/5/2011
  4. “[W]hen I got out of college, they still had ads that were segregated by sex—jobs would say… Jobs Male… Jobs Female… And there was still an incredible amount of sexism in the journalism world when I got out. There were very few women. I was one of the first women in the sort of wave of women who went into journalism in the seventies. And I was part of a sex discrimination suit against the place that I worked at in New Haven because we discovered that the women and the men had pretty much the same education and experience and we were making like a third less.” Trish Hall, Op-Ed editor of The New York Times. Wage discrimination: paying women with identical qualifications less. Occupational discrimination: shunting women into particular occupations.
  5. Measuring Labor Market Discrimination Empirical Challenge—how can we separate wage differences due to discrimination from those due to differences in productivity created by different levels of training, education and experience, i.e., human capital? Sample from 1980 Census, when Trish would have been roughly 30 years old. Sample Selection Criteria: Editor or Reporter (1980 occupation=195) Employed by Newspaper (1980 industry=171) Worked more than half-time (more than 20 hours per week & 26 weeks per year) Wage per hour
  6. Table 1. Means of Dependent & Explanatory Variables Less than a third of women were journalists Female journalists earned, on average, 72.7 cents per hour for every dollar earned by male journalists. Their hourly wage was 27.3 % less than male journalists, on average.
  7. Button from 1970 worn by people protesting pay disparity between women and men
  8. Female journalists earned, on average, 31.4% less than male journalists, on average. But, perhaps, it is because male journalists have more experience or education than female journalists
  9. Interpretation: The wages of female journalists in 1980 were 28.3% lower than their male colleagues, on average, holding age and education constant. Method is called “Decomposition of wage differentials” What portion of the wage gap is due to human capital factors, i.e., to differences in productivity? The portion of the wage gap not explained by these differences is attributed to discrimination.
  10. Limitations of the wage gap of 28.3% as evidence of discrimination. Not directly linked to discriminatory behavior—it is an unexplained difference between males and females. It may be biased due to omitted variables.
  11. Wood, Corcoran and Courant (1993) Sample of Michigan Law School Grads of 1972-75. Advantages Three measures of academic performance Grade Point Average (GPA) Dummy variable for whether they participated in moot court. Dummy variable for whether they were are the staff of the law review. Disadvantage: Sample is not representative of the general population
  12. Sample Means Fifteen Years After Graduation
  13. 25% 100%
  14. Earnings (thou. of $ per year) C—Charles M—Michelle 240 180 8 16 Unplanned Absences (days per year)
  15. Earnings (thou. of $ per year) 240 180 A 1 2 8 16 Unplanned Absences (days per year)
  16. Earnings (thou. of $ per year) ΔEM ΔEC A ΔA = –1 Unplanned Absences (days per year)
  17. Earnings (thou. of $ per year) 240 180 1 2 8 16 Unplanned Absences (days per year)
  18. Limitations of the wage gap of 28.3% as evidence of discrimination. 1. Assumes that Education and Experience are not affected by discrimination. (Story about female funeral directors struggles to find apprenticeships.) “The observed productive characteristic that contributes most of the wage gap between women and men in the same occupation is labor market experience” (Ehrenberg & Smith, p. 404)
  19. 2. Assumes that the return to education and experience is the same for both groups. Story about the black cotton-picker. Women Men Question: why were women journalists getting a lower return from experience and a higher one from education?
  20. Lets Ignore Ed temporarily It must be true that: Taking the diff: Add and subtract from the RHS
  21. where = the difference in the average levels of experience—human capital—between men and women = the differences in which the average levels of human capital are rewarded in the male and female wage equations. Often called… “unjustified discrimination”
  22. Focus on the relationship between wages and experience: Women Men
  23. Male wage equation Slope = A B Female wage equation Slope = C
  24. Part of wage gap due to differences in human capital Distance AB BC Part of wage gap due to “unjustified discrimination”
  25. Part of wage gap due to differences in human capital Distance AB BC Part of wage gap due to “unjustified discrimination” Women Men AB BC
  26. Male wage equation A 0.027 B Female wage equation 0.280 C
  27. Interpretation of the Graph Male wage function is steeper and thus shows a greater payoff for additional investments in experience and represent average levels of experience for males and females respectively is the expected wage of males, i.e., it is the predicted conditional mean. is the expected wage of females, assuming that their experience was rewarded like men. is the expected wage of females.
  28. Differences in labor market preferences across genders? Tastes for parenting Physical attributes Societal and parental expectations—How are these formed? Past discrimination Anticipated discrimination (Statistical discrimination becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.)
  29. Is the wage gap changing over time?
  30. Sample from 2000 Census, when Trish would have been roughly 50 years old. Sample Selection Criteria: Editor (2000 code=283) or Reporter (281) Employed by Newspaper (2000 industry=647) Worked more than half-time (more than 20 hours per week & 26 weeks per year) Wage per hour
  31. Table 1. Means of Dependent & Explanatory Variables
  32. Women Men
  33. Median Annual Earnings of Full-Time Workers by Gender, 1960-2010 Earnings (thou. of 2010$) Male Female Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Historical Income Tables, Table P-38. Full-Time, Year-Round Workers by Median Earnings and Sex
  34. Gender Earnings Gap for Full-Time, Full-Year Workers, 1960-2010 77.4 60.7 All Measures of the Gender Gap are Narrowing
  35. Why is the gender earnings gap closing? Increases in labor market experience of women Increases in the education of women. Decreases in unionization Increases in the demand for intellectual skills relative to physical strength. Shifts of women into higher paying occupations Decreases in discrimination?
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