Public-Private Employment Choice, Wage Differentials, and Gender in Turkey
Aysıt Tansel ()
Economic Development and Cultural Change, 2005, vol. 53, issue 2, 453-77
Abstract:
The main objective of this article is to examine the factors that explain the employment choice and the wage differentials in public administration, state-owned enterprises, and the formal private wage sector in Turkey. Selectivity-corrected wage equations are estimated for each sector for men and women separately. Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition of the wage differentials between sectors by gender and between men and women by sector are carried out. Results indicate that when controlled for observed characteristics and sample selection, for men public administration wages are higher than private sector wages except at the university level where the wages are at par. State-owned enterprise wages for men are higher than private sector wages. Similar results are obtained for women. Further, while the wages of men and women are at parity in the public administration, there is a large gender wage gap in the private sector in favor of men. Private returns to schooling are found to be lower in the noncompetitive public rather than in the competitive private sector.
Date: 2005
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Related works:
Working Paper: Public-Private Employment Choice, Wage Differentials and Gender in Turkey (2004) 
Working Paper: Public-Private Employment Choice, Wage Differentials and Gender in Turkey (1999) 
Working Paper: Public-Private Employment Choice, Wage Differentials and Gender in Turkey (1999) 
Working Paper: Public_Private Employment Choice, Wage Differential and Gender in Turkey (1999)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ucp:ecdecc:y:2005:v:53:i:2:p:453-77
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