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CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET

CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET. Chapter objectives: Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race. Provide economic theories of wage discrimination. Review evidence on whether earnings differentials are due to discrimination.

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CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET

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  1. CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET Chapter objectives: • Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race. • Provide economic theories of wage discrimination. • Review evidence on whether earnings differentials are due to discrimination

  2. Figure 12.1 Mean Earnings as a Percentage of White Male Earnings, Various Demographic Groups, Full-Time Workers over 24 Years Old, 2008

  3. Source: 2000 Economic Report of the President

  4. Measuring Discrimination • The Blinder-Oaxaca Decomposition • Y1=a1 + b1*x1 • Y2=a2 + b2*x2 • Y1-Y2 = EXP + UNEXP where EXP = (x1-x2)*b1 UNEXP = (a1-a2) + (b1-b2)*x1

  5. 2000 Economic Report of the President: • A recent study using longitudinal data from the late 1980s found that • about one-third of the pay gap was explained by differences in the skills and experience that women bring to the labor market. • about 28 percent of the gap was due to differences in the industries and occupations in which men and women worked and in their union status. • Accounting for these differences raises the ratio of female to male median wages for the late 1980s from about 72 percent to about 88 percent, leaving around 12 percent unexplained.

  6. 2000 Economic Report of the President: • Even as several beneficial trends have tended to boost women’s wages relative to men’s and helped narrow the male-female wage gap, two major trends have worked simultaneously to widen it. • increases in the pay premium for high skills (education/experience) • Rising disparity in earnings across occupations (wages in “male” occupations are rising faster).

  7. 2000 Economic Report of the President:

  8. Economic Theories of Discrimination • Employer Discrimination • Employee Discrimination • Customer Discrimination • Monopsonistic Discrimination

  9. Employer Discrimination Employer behaves as if minority worker’s true MRP is MRP-d where d is measure of employer prejudice against minority. Firm pays for discrimination in the form of lower profits (BFG).

  10. Employer Discrimination • Non-discriminating employers generate horizontal portion of demand curve. • Discriminating employers generate downward sloping portion of demand curve. • Over time, non-discriminating employers should drive discriminating employers out of business.

  11. Employer Discrimination Statistical discrimination. Each worker’s productivity is measured with some error: true productivity = measured productivity + error If expected value of error depends on demographic group, can use group status to improve estimate of productivity. As variance of error within a group rises, the value of discriminating on basis of group status is reduced. Profitable to firm and may persist.

  12. Review of Economics and Statistics, 1989

  13. Employer Discrimination • Monopsonistic discrimination. • If search costs create upward-sloping labor supply curves to individual employers, and if discrimination raises the search costs of certain groups of workers, monopsonistic behavior creates wage differentials among otherwise identical workers. • Profitable for firm & may persist.

  14. Evidence on Monopsonistic Discrimination Monopsonistic Discrimination and the Gender Wage Gap, by Erling Barth, Harald Dale-Olsen, June 1999 • Using matched employer-employee data from Norway, we investigate the wage structure within and between establishments, and present novel evidence that the establishments' excess turnover of employees is sensitive to the wage premium of men, but not to the wage premium of women. Furthermore, we show that male turnover is more wage-elastic than female turnover.

  15. Evidence on Employer Discrimination American Economic Review, September 2004

  16. Employee Discrimination • Suppose employees from majority work dislike working with the minority group. • Employee discrimination generates supply-related behavior that might cause employers to segregate their plants by race or sex if possible. • If not, wage differentials arise as a result of the need of employers to retain workers in the majority group. • Could be profitable for firm and may persist. • Difficult to find empirical evidence on employee discrimination.

  17. Customer Discrimination • MRP for minority group is reduced because customer is willing to pay higher price for product when provided by majority group. • Customers pay for prejudice in form of higher prices. • Profitable for firm and may persist.

  18. Evidence on Customer Discrimination Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1998

  19. Evidence on Customer Discrimination Journal of Labor Economics, January 1988.

  20. Evidence on Customer Discrimination % of waitstaff that is male rises with % of clientele that is male, but independent of sex of owner’s managers Quarterly Journal of Economics, August 1996

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