Abstract
PurposeThis paper explores the wages of White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, Native American and “other race” women and men once differences in basic characteristics among these 12 groups are accounted for. The authors aim to extend comparisons beyond those of women and men of the same race or the various races within a given gender.Design/methodology/approachTo undertake the conditional analysis, first, the authors propose a simple re-weighing scheme that allows to build a counterfactual economy in which workers' attributes for all gender–race/ethnicity groups are the same. Second, the authors use a well-known re-weighting scheme that involves logit estimations.FindingsOnly Hispanic men, Native American men and Asian women have conditional wages around average. Black men and, especially, White, Black, Hispanic, Native American and “other race” women have conditional wages clearly below average, whereas those of Asian and White men are well above average. The wage differential between a privileged and a deprived group is disentangled into the premium of the former and the penalty of the latter, which brings a new perspective to what has been done in the literature based on pairwise comparisons. In this intersectional framework, the authors document that gender penalizes more than race.Originality/valueThis paper examines intergroup earnings differentials using a methodology that allows to examine 12 gender–race/ethnicity groups jointly, which is this work's distinctive feature. The authors' intersectional framework allows to picture the effect of gender and race/ethnicity more broadly than what the literature has shown thus far.
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Strategy and Management
Reference48 articles.
1. Economics and identity;The Quarterly Journal of Economics,2000
2. Altonji, J. and Blank, R. (1999), “Race and gender in the labor market”, in Ashenfelter, O. and Card, D. (Eds), Handbook of Labor Economics, Elsevier, Vol. 3, pp. 3143-3259.
3. The relative earnings of young Mexican, Black, and white women;Industrial and Labor Relations Review,2002
4. The importance of labor force attachment differences across Black, Mexican, and white men;Journal of Human Resources,2004
5. The sexual orientation wage gap: the role of occupational sorting and human capital;Industrial and Labor Relations Review,2008
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献