Does More Mean Less? The Male/Female Wage Gap and the Proportion of Females at the Establishment Level
Kevin Reilly and
Tony Wirjanto ()
No 98001, Working Papers from University of Waterloo, Department of Economics
Abstract:
This paper examines the effect of the proportion of females in the establishment on the male/female wage gap and the effectiveness of an affirmative action program in reducing this gap. A unique data set makes this paper possible since it has information on both individuals and the establishments they work for. The paper documents a significant difference in the sex composition of the establishment in which males and females work. Further, it is shown that the proportion of females in the establishment is negatively related to the wages of both males and females and accounts for 26 percent of the gap in log wages between men and woment. Due to an inadequacy of the traditional method of decomposing wages when examining an affirmative action program, a new method of decomposition is developed: the characteristic wage decomposition. The results suggest that an employment equity programme will reduce the male/female wage gap by 20 percent.
Date: 1997-09, Revised 1997-09
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Related works:
Journal Article: Does More Mean Less? The Male/Female Wage Gap and the Proportion of Females at the Establishment Level (1999) 
Working Paper: Does More Mean Less? The Male/Female Wage Gap and the Proportion of Female at the Establishment Level (1998)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wat:wpaper:98001
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