262 results on '"Wage Differentials"'
Search Results
2. From retaliation to resilience: tracing the path of earnings stability in competitive markets.
- Author
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Park, Jimi, Yoo, Shijin, and Noh, Minyoung
- Subjects
ECONOMIC competition ,BUSINESS cycles ,GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ,SOCIAL impact ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to develop a more comprehensive understanding of the consequences of retaliations and our evidence indicates that retaliations are beneficial for firms with supranormal earnings by making their higher earnings more persistent, but harmful for firms with subnormal earnings by slowing the recovery of their earnings. Design/methodology/approach: This paper use annual Compustat files based on Fama-French 48 industry. The time-varying competitive reactions (CRs) for each firm are captured using quarterly rolling-window estimation across 41 windows with five years (i.e. 20 observations) in each window. This paper measure earnings persistence as the slope coefficient (ß1) from regressing future earnings on current earnings. The result remains qualitatively similar to the main findings when alternative measures of earnings persistence. Findings: Abnormal earnings are expected to dissipate in the long run owing to competitive forces, but this paper show that more retaliatory CRs increase earnings persistence. This is good news for supranormal firms as they can sustain high profitability. However, it will be harder to revert subnormal earnings to the industry mean if such firms conduct more retaliatory CRs. This paper also show that these associations are stronger for less competitive industries. Research limitations/implications: First, high earnings persistence per se would not be a major consideration in the firm's strategic decisions but a natural by-product of such decisions spanning an extended period of operations. Second, though this paper focus on the period of 2004–2018 that includes the rebound after financial crisis in 2008, an extension of the observation period over a longer economic cycle would verify our results. Practical implications: CRs are regarded as an evolving portfolio of dynamic marketing decisions and tools for strategic decisions in our study. It helps how firms manage competition over time to lengthen the superior performance. Also it helps the low-profitability firms attempting to improve profitability by showing nonretaliation may be a more appropriate strategy than retaliation. Social implications: Firms in financial distress suffer from illiquidity, survival of firms is contingent on meeting their financial obligations, thus need for turnaround decisions. However, retaliations under financial distress can mitigate the effect of such turnaround decisions and thereby aggravate the situation. Originality/value: Greater persistence extends the benefits of superior earnings, thus increasing the opportunities for value exploitation, but it may also restrict earnings recovery. This paper finds that the way that firms react within the competition explain the differences in earnings persistence. Although a large body of research has examined the static drivers (e.g. firm size and diversification) of the differential persistence of earnings, there has been little research on dynamic drivers that explicitly recognize the erosion process for earnings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Skill Demand and Wages: Evidence From Linked Vacancy Data.
- Author
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Ziegler, Lennart
- Abstract
This study provides new evidence on skill requirements in the labor market and shows to what extent skill demand is associated with wages and vacancy duration. In a sample of more than 1.5 million job postings administered by the Austrian public employment service, I identify the most common skill requirements mentioned in job descriptions. Accounting for a broad set of detailed job characteristics, there exists a robust association between the number of skill requirements and wages. In particular, jobs with many skill requirements pay substantially higher wages. While I estimate large effects for managerial and analytical skills, associations with most soft skills are small. Employers also need longer to fill vacancies with many skill requirements. Robustness tests show that measurement error is unlikely to explain these results and that the estimates can be replicated using vacancy postings from another job board. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. CHAPTER 6: ESSENTIAL WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES: AN INTERSECTIONAL PERSPECTIVE.
- Author
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Hanley, Caroline and Branch, Enobong Hannah
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,COVID-19 pandemic ,RACE ,HUMAN capital ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Public health measures implemented early in the COVID-19 pandemic brought the idea of essential work into the public discourse, as the public reflected upon what types of work are essential for society to function, who performs that work, and how the labour of essential workers is rewarded. This chapter focusses on the rewards associated with essential work. The authors develop an intersectional lens on work that was officially deemed essential in 2020 to highlight longstanding patterns of devaluation among essential workers, including those undergirded by systemic racism in employment and labour law. The authors use quantitative data from the CPS-MORG to examine earnings differences between essential and non-essential workers and investigate whether the essential worker wage gap changed from month to month in 2020. The authors find that patterns of valuation among essential workers cannot be explained by human capital or other standard labour market characteristics. Rather, intersectional wage inequalities in 2020 reflect historical patterns that are highly durable and did not abate in the first year of the global pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Commuting while Black: compensating differentials and Black–White wage gap in Canada.
- Author
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Dilmaghani, Maryam
- Subjects
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RACIAL wage gap , *WAGE differentials , *BLACK people , *REAL estate economics , *JOB applications , *DIVORCE law , *ACHIEVEMENT gap - Published
- 2024
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6. Analysis of gender wage gap and the Nigerian labour market: a new empirical evidence.
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Orji, Anthony and Nwosu, Emmanuel O.
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WAGE differentials , *GENDER wage gap , *LABOR market , *WOMEN'S wages , *ENVIRONMENTAL economics , *INCOME inequality - Published
- 2024
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7. Which employers pay a higher college wage premium?
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Ikeuchi, Kenta, Fukao, Kyoji, and Perugini, Cristiano
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WAGE differentials , *SENIOR leadership teams , *WAGES , *BUSINESS ethics , *PERSONNEL management , *INTERNATIONAL competition , *OCCUPATIONAL training , *JUNIOR colleges - Published
- 2024
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8. Anthropomorphised or not? Natural-organic logo's impact on product value perceptions and consumers' willingness to pay.
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Ho, Kenneth Fu Xian, Tarabashkina, Liudmila, and Liu, Fang
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VALUE (Economics) ,WILLINGNESS to pay ,PERCEPTION (Philosophy) ,PRICES ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,WAGE differentials ,LOGO design ,GROCERY shopping - Abstract
Purpose: Building on associative priming, anthropomorphism and biophilia theories, this study aims to explain that a natural–organic (that shows a natural object) and an anthropomorphised natural–organic logo (that shows an anthropomorphised natural object) both act as primes and imbue specific product value perceptions, which subsequently influence willingness to pay a premium price when products have not been used by or are unfamiliar to consumers. Design/methodology/approach: Two between-subjects experiments were conducted with different products (one with real, but unfamiliar to consumers brand and another with a fictitious brand). Structural equation modelling was used to test the hypotheses. Findings: Experimental studies showed that natural–organic logos evoked stronger utilitarian (functional and economic) value perceptions, which triggered greater willingness to pay a premium price compared to anthropomorphised natural–organic logos. The effect of hedonic (emotional and novelty) values on willingness to pay a premium price was stronger when an anthropomorphised natural–organic logo was used. Research limitations/implications: This research offers novel theoretical contributions highlighting the importance of careful logo design to imbue desired value perceptions when products have not been consumed or trialled. Practical implications: Anthropomorphised natural–organic and natural–organic logos can provide different benefits to brand managers and can be used strategically to form desired value perceptions before products are consumed. Brands that wish to enhance premium pricing via hedonic values should consider using an anthropomorphised natural–organic logo. Natural–organic logos may be more suitable for brands that want to emphasise superior utilitarian values. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this research provides the first empirical assessment of the differential effects of the two forms of natural–organic logos on value perceptions and willingness to pay premium price. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Effects of educational mismatch on wages across industry and occupations: sectoral comparison
- Author
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Lasso-Dela-Vega, Elena, Sánchez-Ollero, José Luis, and García-Pozo, Alejandro
- Published
- 2023
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10. The gender gap in voluntary turnover.
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Artz, Benjamin
- Subjects
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GENDER inequality , *WAGE differentials , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *RESIGNATION of employees , *PARENTHOOD - Abstract
Purpose: The study's objective is to measure the gender gap in quit behavior, consider whether it has changed over time and determine whether parenthood affects the gender gap in quit decisions. Design/methodology/approach: The quantitative study design leverages two separate USA data sources to analyze the gender gap in quits over time. Two separate cohorts confirm the study's results in Logit, ordinary least squares (OLS) and fixed effects estimations, using the Current Population Survey (CPS) and the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY). Findings: After controlling for demographic and job characteristics, individual and geographic fixed effects and local unemployment rates, the study finds that the gender gap in voluntary turnover has declined over time and that parenthood's effect on quit behavior has converged between genders. Originality/value: Women earn less than men. One common explanation is women's propensity to interrupt their careers, often voluntarily, more so than men. Yet, the determinants and trends of this gender gap in quit behavior has not been given much attention in the literature, including the role of parenthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. The cost of equity to earnings yield differential and dividend policy.
- Author
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Esqueda, Omar and O'Connor, Thomas
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CAPITAL costs ,WAGE differentials ,DIVIDEND policy ,STOCK repurchasing ,DIVIDEND yield ,STOCKS (Finance) - Abstract
Purpose: The authors measure the cost of equity to earnings yield differential for a sample of 2,035 non-financial firms. In a series of Logit and Tobit regressions, the authors examine if the cost of equity to earnings yield differential is related to dividend policy in the manner predicted by agency theory. Design/methodology/approach: Agency theory says a firm's optimal dividend policy is partially determined by the relationship between the earnings yield and the cost of equity capital. When the cost of equity is higher (lower) than the earnings yield, firms are motivated to (not) pay dividends as this reduces the cost of capital and holding other things constant, increases corporate valuations. The authors test whether managers set dividend policies to maximize the value of the firm. Findings: The study's findings show that when the cost of equity is higher (lower) than earnings yield, firms are more (less) likely to be dividend payers and the payouts are higher (lower). The results are robust to the inclusion of share repurchases as an alternative to cash distributions. The study's findings support the cost of equity hypothesis and are consistent with alternative dividend theories. Originality/value: The study's findings support the cost of equity hypothesis and are consistent with alternative dividend theories. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first paper testing the cost of equity hypothesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The role of grit, engagement and exhaustion in salesperson productive procrastination.
- Author
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Edmondson, Diane, Matthews, Lucy, and Ward, Cheryl
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PROCRASTINATION ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,PSYCHOLOGICAL burnout ,SALES personnel ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: Due to the fact that most individuals tend to engage in some form of procrastination, it is important for organizations to investigate this phenomenon. The purpose of this study is to explore the impact of family–work conflict, grit, engagement and emotional exhaustion on productive procrastination for business-to-business salespeople. These specific antecedents are used to better understand what leads a salesperson to engage in productive procrastination in the workplace. Design/methodology/approach: Using a Qualtrics panel, 305 business-to-business salespeople were surveyed to investigate what factors lead a salesperson to engage in productive procrastination. These salespeople were from a variety of industries to increase generalizability. All measures were taken from the extant literature. Partial least squares structural equation modeling was used to analyze the data. Findings: Using the job demands-resources model as the framework, the results indicate that the type of engagement has a differential impact on a salesperson's usage of productive procrastination such that cognitive engagement has a negative impact while emotional engagement has a positive impact on productive procrastination. Emotional exhaustion and family–work conflict lead to productive procrastination but grit minimizes productive procrastination usage. Originality/value: To the best of the authors' knowledge, this study is one of the first to explore the positive aspects of procrastination among salespeople. Specifically, this study focuses on productive procrastination and its antecedents. Relevant managerial implications that can help organizations better understand productive procrastination are discussed and examples are provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. Executive pay disparity and cost of debt financing.
- Author
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Chou, Hsin-I, Pan, Xiaofei, and Zhao, Jing
- Subjects
EXECUTIVE compensation ,CAPITAL costs ,CREDIT risk ,WAGE differentials ,SYNDICATED loans ,CREDIT analysis ,CHIEF executive officers ,CREDIT spread - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to examine the relationship between executive pay disparity and the cost of debt. Design/methodology/approach: The authors use a sample of syndicated bank loans granted to United States (US) listed firms from 1992 to 2014 and adopt the loan yield spread (Chief Executive Officer (CEO) pay slice) as the main proxy for the cost of debt (executive pay disparity). The authors also use the Heckman two-stage model to address the sample selection bias and the two-stage least squares and propensity score matching methods to control the potential endogeneity issues. To test different views about executive pay disparity, the authors adopt the cash-to-stock ratio to proxy for managerial risk-shifting incentives. Findings: The authors find that the cost of debt is significantly higher for firms with larger executive pay disparity, which is robust to sample selection bias, endogeneity concerns, alternative measures and various controls. This positive relationship increases with the risk-shifting incentives of CEOs instead of other top executives, which supports the managerial power view, and is stronger for firms with higher levels of financial distress. The findings suggest that creditors view executive pay disparity are associated with higher credit risk and CEO entrenchment. Originality/value: This paper reveals one "dark" side of executive pay disparity: it increases the cost of debt and identifies a significant role played by CEOs' risk-shifting incentives. The authors provide direct evidence of the relevance of pay differential to corporate credit analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Review of The Contest for Value in Global Value Chains: Correcting for Distorted Distribution in the Global Apparel Industry.
- Author
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Suwandi, Intan
- Subjects
GLOBAL value chains ,CLOTHING industry ,WAGE differentials ,LABOR productivity ,CHALLENGED books ,POWER (Social sciences) ,WORKING hours - Abstract
This article provides a review of the book "The Contest for Value in Global Value Chains: Correcting for Distorted Distribution in the Global Apparel Industry" by Lilac Nachum and Yoshiteru Uramoto. The book challenges the prevailing notion that power relations in global value chains are heavily skewed, arguing instead that there is a more balanced distribution of power between suppliers and lead firms in the global apparel industry. However, the authors also acknowledge that lead firms can exert control over suppliers through demands and control mechanisms. The book explores the wage-labor productivity gap in the apparel industry in Bangladesh, attributing it to exploitation and a power imbalance that prevents labor from unionizing and bargaining collectively. The article highlights the burden of inequality on workers in global value chains, particularly in the apparel industry, where multinational corporations take advantage of low labor costs. It also discusses the vulnerability of these workers, who often face long working hours and low wages. The article suggests that while some suppliers in Bangladesh claim to pay above-average wages, they may still exploit their workers through piece-rate systems and other means. It emphasizes the need to understand the historical context of colonialism, imperialism, and neoliberal trade policies that have shaped these power relations. The article concludes by calling for a critical examination of global capital-labor relations and the hierarchical world economy. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Curvilinear effect of economic policy uncertainty on innovation in Chinese manufacturing firms: do managerial pay gaps matter?
- Author
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Zhong, Xi, Chen, Weihong, and Ren, Ge
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ECONOMIC uncertainty ,ECONOMIC policy ,WAGE differentials ,INNOVATIONS in business ,ECONOMIC impact - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to re-examine the impact of economic policy uncertainty (EPU) on firm innovation. Studies on how EPU affects firm innovation have been inconclusive. The authors clarified the curvilinear relationship between EPU and firm innovation and examined the moderating effects of managerial pay gaps, specifically vertical pay disparity and horizontal pay dispersion. Design/methodology/approach: This study's analyses used data collected from Chinese listed companies from 2007 to 2019. Findings: The authors found an inverted U-shaped relationship between EPU and firm innovation. Furthermore, vertical pay disparity strengthens the curvilinear relationship, while horizontal pay dispersion weakens it. Practical implications: First, politicians should avoid adjusting economic policies too frequently because the high EPU levels created by frequent adjustments can inhibit business innovation. Second, firms should be aware that EPU creates opportunities for leapfrogging. In particular, firms can incentivize executives to take advantage of the valuable growth opportunities presented by EPU by widening vertical pay disparities and avoiding excessive horizontal pay dispersion. Originality/value: First, the authors analyze not only the positive effects of lower EPU on firm innovation but also the negative impacts of higher EPU to examine EPU's "double-edged sword" effect on firm innovation. Second, the investigation of vertical pay disparity and horizontal pay dispersion as moderating variables sheds new light on the equivocal research findings regarding the EPU–firm innovation relationship and clarifies the boundary conditions of the double-edged sword effect of EPU on firm innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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16. Performance implications of financial resource allocation in new hiring: the case of major league baseball.
- Author
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Shin, Ho Wook, Cho, Sungho, and Lee, Jong Kwan
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WAGE differentials ,JOB performance ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,NEW employees ,PAY for performance - Abstract
Purpose: Integrating the resource-based view (RBV) with pay dispersion research, the authors examine how the allocation of resources between hiring new employees and compensating current employees, as well as the allocation of resources among new employees, affects organizational performance. Design/methodology/approach: The authors use panel data on Major League Baseball teams. The authors also use system generalized method of moments (GMM) estimations to control for the impact of past performance on current performance, unobserved individual heterogeneity and omitted variable bias. Findings: The authors find that the larger the portion of the human resources (HR) budget allocated to hiring new employees, the poorer organizational performance becomes unless the focal organization has already significantly underperformed. The authors also find that pay concentration among new employees has a positive impact on organizational performance unless the focal organization has already significantly overperformed. Originality/value: This study extends RBV research by examining how resource allocation patterns affect organizational performance, which has rarely been studied. Moreover, by showing the organizational context's significant effect on the outcome of financial allocation for resource acquisition, this study extends both the RBV research and the pay dispersion research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. The differential pricing of cash flows and total accruals.
- Author
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Mostafa, Wael
- Subjects
CASH flow ,SPOT prices ,ACCRUAL basis accounting ,INVESTORS ,FLOW coefficient ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: Recent studies on the securities market's differential pricing of earnings components indicate that cash flows from operations are valued more highly than extreme total accruals. However, no previous study has examined whether cash flows from operations have a higher valuation than moderate total accruals. Therefore, this study examines the securities market's differential pricing of cash flows from operations and both moderate and extreme total accruals. Design/methodology/approach: The study's sample is divided into two sub-samples: a moderate total accruals sub-sample; and an extreme total accruals sub-sample. To evaluate whether cash flows have a higher valuation when compared to total accruals, for the entire sample and for each of the two sub-samples, the study examines the statistical significance of the difference between slope coefficients of cash flows and total accruals for regression of returns on both unexpected cash flows from operations and unexpected total accruals. Findings: Consistent with prior research, results from the entire sample show a differential higher valuation of cash flows when compared to total accruals. Another finding, consistent with recent studies, is that cash flows from operations have a higher valuation when compared to extreme total accruals. However, there is no higher differential valuation of cash flows over moderate total accruals. These findings support the decomposition of earnings into the components of cash flows from operations and total accruals only when total accruals are extreme (rather than moderate). Practical implications: A possible explanation for these results is that since accruals predict cash flows, total accruals – when moderate (i.e. not extreme) – are priced similarly to cash flows. These results reveal that when total accruals are moderate, earnings are a better proxy for the underlying cash flows (over the entire future horizon, not just the current period) than is cash flows. However, since total accruals are unlikely to persist in a permanent way over the years, these results indicate that the decomposition of earnings into the components of cash flows from operations and total accruals is consistent with the information set used to value equity securities. Therefore, separate disclosure of cash flows is value relevant. In addition, users of financial statements certainly need the cash flows information as an ex-post validation of the prior earnings. Originality/value: This study's contribution stems from its determination of the preferred level of disaggregation of earnings components (i.e. operating cash flows and total accruals). This is expected to help investors in their attempt to enhance the outcome of their informed investment and credit decisions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Beginning farmer status and financial performance differentials.
- Author
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Weir, Rebecca, Hadrich, Joleen, Bonanno, Alessandro, and Jablonski, Becca B.R.
- Subjects
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CORPORATE profits , *RATE of return , *ASSET allocation , *RETURNS on sales , *RETURN on assets , *WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: Beginning Farmer and Rancher programs are available for operators with ten years of experience or less on any farm. These programs support farmers who are starting operations, often without an initial asset allocation. However, some beginning farmers acquire operations that are already established, with substantial assets in place. The authors investigate whether a profitability gap exists between beginning farmers entering the industry ex novo and those operating a preexisting operation and if so, what factors contribute to the gap. Design/methodology/approach: The authors utilize the Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition to determine what drives financial differences between first-generation beginning farmers, second-generation beginning farmers and established farmers using a unique farm-level panel dataset from 1997 to 2021. Findings: Results indicate that first- and second-generation beginning farmers have similar operating profit margins, but first-generation beginning farmers have a statistically higher rate of return on assets than second-generation beginning farmers. Established farmers outperform second-generation beginning farmers on both the operating profit margin and rate of return on assets. These results suggest that economic viability for beginning farmers differs depending upon the initial status of their operation, suggesting that heterogenous policies may be more impactful in supporting various pathways to enter agriculture. Originality/value: This analysis is the first to identify beginning farmers that enter the industry without an asset base and those that take over a principal operator role on an established farm through an assumed farm transition. The authors quantify differences in financial performance using detailed accrual-based financial data that tracks farms over time in one dataset. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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19. The empirical demand for farm insurance in Ireland: a quantile regression approach.
- Author
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Loughrey, Jason and Vidyaratne, Herath
- Subjects
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QUANTILE regression , *CROP insurance , *FARMS , *CONTANGO & backwardation , *ECONOMIC research , *INSURANCE , *WAGE differentials , *INSURANCE premiums - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the association between farm/farmer characteristics and unsubsidized farm insurance premium expenditure in Ireland. The distribution of farm insurance expenditures is wide, and it is important to understand the extent to which individual factors influence demand for different levels of insurance premium. Design/methodology/approach: The quantile regression approach and farm accountancy data from the Teagasc National Farm Survey are used to model the association between farm/farmer characteristics and farm insurance demand in Ireland. Findings: Asset values (livestock, buildings and machinery) are positively associated with total insurance expenditure. Both forestry area and crop area are significantly associated with farm insurance expenditure with a stronger influence on the middle and upper part of the distribution. The interaction between farm income and farmer age is positively associated with insurance expenditure pointing to the importance of farm income protection. Research limitations/implications: The research is mainly concerned with insuring against substantive risks, which are capable of threatening the asset base and continuation of the farm business. Future research can integrate questions in relation to farm safety and farmer health with research on the economic survival of the farm business. Practical implications: Farmers in Ireland adopt unsubsidized farm insurance as a risk management tool. This situation is relevant to other EU member states including Belgium, Denmark, Germany and Sweden. The findings can be used to inform stakeholders and policymakers about the relative impact of different factors on insurance expenditure. Originality/value: Previous research has typically focused on the linear relationship between farm/farmer characteristics and insurance demand without accounting for variability across the size distribution. This research is based on the quantile regression approach where the association between farm/farmer characteristics and farm insurance expenditure can be assessed at different points of the distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The rainbow reality: income difference and discrimination based on sexual orientation and occupations.
- Author
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Mantovani, Gabriela Gomes and Staduto, Jefferson Andronio Ramundo
- Subjects
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HOMOPHOBIA , *INCOME , *GAY couples , *INCOME inequality , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: The article aimed to identify and analyze the income differences across the income distribution between homosexuals and heterosexuals by occupational groups in Brazil. Design/methodology/approach: PNAD-C microdata was used in two periods (2013–2015 and 2016 to 2019), highlighting the different economic, social and political contexts in Brazil. Recentered influence function and quantile income decomposition were estimated to verify the difference and income discrimination according to the guideline the worker's sexuality. Findings: For some cases homosexual workers earn more and in others, homosexuals earn less than heterosexuals. The differences in remuneration according to sexual orientation were smaller in positions that demand low qualification and competence. The quantile income decomposition between 2013 and 2015 revealed the positive effect of discrimination was the generator of income disparities between homosexuals and heterosexuals, with greater impact for the 10th and 90th quantiles and on groups that require small levels of complexity and education. Between 2016 and 2019, there was the presence of both effects, but the explained effect was the promoter of wage disparities in most occupational groups. Research limitations/implications: Given the dataset, it was only possible to work with proxies of homosexual couples. Originality/value: There has been little research linking the themes of discrimination based on sexual orientation and occupational groups, and so far, it does not exist similar in Latin America. This study found that sexual orientation influences remuneration according to the occupational group that the worker belongs to, affecting income and, consequently, occupational choice. This connection of issues will contribute to new insights into discrimination based on sexual orientation, as well as more effective public policies aimed at reducing discrimination against homosexuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Privilege and hindrance on the USA earnings distribution by gender and race/ethnicity: an intersectional framework with 12 groups.
- Author
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Alonso-Villar, Olga and del Río, Coral
- Subjects
- *
RACE , *ETHNICITY , *ASIANS , *WAGE differentials , *GENDER , *WHITE men , *GENDER wage gap - Abstract
Purpose: This 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/approach: To 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. Findings: Only 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/value: This 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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. A field study of age discrimination in the workplace: the importance of gender and race‒pay the gap.
- Author
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Drydakis, Nick, Paraskevopoulou, Anna, and Bozani, Vasiliki
- Subjects
AGE discrimination ,GENDER inequality ,EMPLOYEE selection ,OLDER people ,AGE discrimination in employment ,RACISM ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: The study examines whether age intersects with gender and race during the initial stage of the hiring process and affects access to vacancies outcomes and wage sorting. Design/methodology/approach: In order to answer the research question, the study collects data from four simultaneous field experiments in England. The study compares the labour market outcomes of younger White British men with those of older White British men and women, and with those of older Black British men and women. The study concentrates on low-skilled vacancies in hospitality and sales in the private sector. Findings: The results of this study indicate that older White British men and women, as well as older Black British men and women, experience occupational access constraints and are sorted into lower-paid jobs than younger White British men. The level of age discrimination is found to be higher for Black British men and women. In addition, Black British women experience the highest level of age discrimination. These patterns may well be in line with prejudices against racial minority groups and stereotypical sexist beliefs that the physical strengths and job performance of women decline earlier than those do for men. Practical implications: If prejudices against older individuals are present, then anti-discrimination legislation may be the appropriate response, especially for racial minorities and women. Eliminating age discrimination in selection requires firms to adopt inclusive human resources (HR) policies at the earliest stages of the recruitment process. Originality/value: This research presents for the first-time comparisons of access to vacancies and wage sorting between younger male racial majorities and older male racial majorities, older female racial majorities, older male racial minorities, and older female racial minorities. In addition, the driven mechanism of the assigned differences is explored. Because the study has attempted to minimise the negative employer stereotypes vis-à-vis older employees, with respect to the employees' motivation, productivity, and health, such prejudices against older individuals may be considered taste-based discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Job loss and food insecurity during the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Milovanska-Farrington, Stefani
- Subjects
- *
COVID-19 pandemic , *NUTRITION education , *LAYOFFS , *FOOD security , *CHILD nutrition , *UNEMPLOYMENT statistics , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: Living a nutritious lifestyle requires that people get a sufficient amount of nutrients, vitamins and minerals every day. Healthy dietary practices are related to a stronger immune system, better prevention and easier recovery from illnesses, lower blood pressure, healthy weight, lower risk of diabetes, heart problems and other medical conditions and improved overall well-being (WHO, 2020). Therefore, to maintain a strong immune system able to prevent diseases and ease recovery, optimal nutrition and healthy habits are of increased importance during a pandemic such as Covid-19. However, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than 22 million Americans have lost a job between February and October 2020, increasing the unemployment rate from 3.5% in February 2020 to 6.9% in October 2020, reaching a peak of 14.7% in April 2020. Job losses during the Covid-19 crisis are likely to put lots of families at risk of malnutrition and food insufficiency and to further deteriorate the already existing food insecurity (Gundersen et al., 2018). This research explores the effect of a recent job loss between August and October 2020 on food sufficiency. Design/methodology/approach: This research examines the impact of a job loss on nutrition and food safety. Specifically, this study explores the effect of a job loss during the Covid-19 pandemic on the level of family and child food sufficiency as perceived by the respondent, confidence about meeting family's dietary needs in the four weeks following the interview, and an indicator of whether the food sufficiency status of the family has deteriorated or not. This study also determines the differential effect of a job loss by individuals who are still employed despite the loss relative to workers who remained unemployed after a job loss during the Covid-19 crisis. Subsample analyses based on ethnicities, genders and educational attainment are also performed to identify the most vulnerable groups. Findings: The results provide evidence that a job loss is associated with a highly statistically significant deterioration of food sufficiency for families and children and a reduction in the confidence in food security for the near future. This effect is observed for all job losers, but from them, it is larger for the ones who are currently unemployed compared to those who are working. The association between a job loss and family's nutrition insecurity is the greatest for Hispanic, males and people with some college. Children's nutrition suffers the most for children whose parents have not completed high school. These results provide an insight into the adverse effect of Covid-19 on food security. Practical implications: From a policy perspective, the results indicate that federal nutrition programs whose goal is to ensure that the dietary needs of Americans, and especially children, are met, which are most likely to benefit the Hispanic population, individuals with low educational attainment and individuals who remained unemployed after losing a job. Originality/value: This study makes several contributions to the growing literature on food security. First, this study is novel in that it examines the effect of an ongoing event, specifically a labor market disruption as a result of a health and economic crisis, on families' nutrition, and does so using the newest publicly available data designed to track the impact of Covid-19 on the American population. This is one of the first studies that investigates the forementioned impacts in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic. This study further contributes to the literature by distinguishing between employed versus unemployed individuals despite a job loss and by studying distinct groups on the population. In addition, this study compares the effects of interest in the onset of the pandemic to a year later to examine the population's adjustment to the crisis. The importance and relevance of the results for policy decision-making are also discussed in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Gender, social networks and job access: evidence from the Algerian labor market.
- Author
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Lassassi, Moundir and Sami, Lylia
- Subjects
SOCIAL networks ,LABOR market ,SEX discrimination against women ,JOB hunting ,RELATIONSHIP quality ,PRECARIOUS employment ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to study the behavior of individuals in their job search. The authors analyze the impact of the size and quality of the network on the probability of finding a job through relationships and the quality of the job found through networks for men and women separately. Design/methodology/approach: For this, the authors estimate a series of logit models using the Algerian employment survey (2003 and 2007). Then, they use these models to undertake predictions of the probability of finding jobs through social networks according to the size of the social networks. Findings: The findings of this research, confirm that men and women use different methods in the job search; women use fewer connection networks in the search compared to men. There appears to exist some discrimination against women in the use of family networks; men use and find more jobs using family relationships. Overall, the jobs found through relationships are more precarious and less stable. Social networks appear to be an effective method of finding a job in Algeria but not for skilled jobs. Originality/value: There are few empirical works that analyze at the same time the role of relationship networks in integration into the labor market and the quality of employment, in particular in the case of Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries. Understanding the intermediation mechanisms can help to develop better employment policy strategies. Peer review: The peer review history for this article is available at: https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-08-2021-0485 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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25. Decomposing wage differences in Brazilian regions: a revised insight about traditional discrimination.
- Author
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Faustino, Izabel, Maia, Katy, Gomes, Magno Rogerio, Mourao, Paulo, and Araujo, Elisangela
- Subjects
WAGE differentials ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,WORKING class white people ,SEX discrimination ,WAGES ,DECOMPOSITION method - Abstract
Purpose: This paper analyzes the issue of wage differentials and gender discrimination in the Brazilian labor market. Design/methodology/approach: The methodology is based on the log-linear equation model by Mincer (1974) and the decomposition method by Oaxaca (1973) and Blinder (1973) and was estimated using data from the National Household Sample Survey (PNAD). Findings: The main results indicate that there was a reduction in wage differentials and gender discrimination in the majority of regions in Brazil for white workers when comparing the available years. However, for non-white workers, the degree of discrimination increased in Brazil, especially in the central-west and southeast regions. Overall, wage decompositions have suggested that women suffer from wage discrimination. Originality/value: This is the first paper detailing wage discrimination across the different Brazilian regions and also controlling for usual dimensions like gender and race. Peer review: The peer review history for this article is available at: https://publons.com/publon/10.1108/IJSE-09-2021-0569. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Gender labor inequalities in the public sector: the interplay between policy and micro-politics.
- Author
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Bermúdez-Figueroa, Eva and Roca, Beltrán
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,PUBLIC sector ,GENDER inequality ,SEX discrimination ,SOCIAL impact ,WAGE differentials ,WOMEN'S employment ,CITIZENS - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to describe and explain women's labor participation in the public sector, particularly at the local level. The paper analyses the representation of women employees in the public sector through a case study of a city council in a mid-sized Spanish city. The authors delve into the extent of gender labor discrimination in public administration, exploring a diversity of situations, experiences, and perceptions of women workers in female, neutral, and male-dominated areas in the local administration. Design/methodology/approach: The authors have applied a combined methodology of quantitative analysis based on an exhaustive analysis of the list of job posts, and qualitative analysis from the narratives of women workers in biographical interviews, in women-dominated, neutral and male-dominated areas. Findings: The authors conclude by providing a clear description of women's representation in local administration. Despite the institutional efforts in applying gender equality norms and public policies in administration, employment and labor market, this article shows the persistent inequality in employment within the administration. The paper demonstrates that public administrations can be seen as gender regimes that tend to reproduce inequality by formal and informal dynamics. This inequality gender reproduction in a supposedly gender-neutral administration reflects discrimination in a labor market. The paper details phenomena relating to horizontal occupational segregation, glass ceilings, sticky floors, and the undervaluing of women's work, among other phenomena. Practical implications: The administration should consider two essential factors that endanger gender equality: (1) the demonstrated regression of gender mainstreaming and the effects on women's employment as a consequence of the crisis, and (2) neoliberal governments and extreme right-wing parties (or neoliberal governments and extreme right-wing parties' support, as is the case with the current Andalusian regional government), whose agenda includes the fight against what neoliberal governments and extreme right-wing parties call "gender ideology". Social implications: The gap between the effectiveness of gender legislation and actual working practices within the administration has been highlighted. This fact should be a wake-up call for the administrations to strictly comply with gender legislation, given that local administrations are the closest to the citizens. Future research should focus on changes to detect any regression and to prevent losing the improvements already achieved, which can still be very much strengthened. Originality/value: This article helps to fill the gap in the literature on gender discrimination in the labor market, which often omits the public sector, especially in local administration, which is the closest administrative structure to citizenship respecting public policies. The article contributes to highlighting the need for an egalitarian labor market in order to achieve optimal performance, commitment and efficiency in egalitarian labor relations in local administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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27. The intersectional effect of age and gender on the work–life balance of managers.
- Author
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Thrasher, Gregory R., Wynne, Kevin, Baltes, Boris, and Bramble, Reed
- Subjects
WORK-life balance ,WAGE differentials ,EMPLOYEE empowerment ,GENDER ,INTERSECTIONALITY ,PRODUCTIVE life span ,WOMEN executives - Abstract
Purpose: Although there is a small body of empirical research on the working lives of managers, both the popular media and the academic literature tend to ignore the distinct ways that role identities such as age and gender intersect to create a complex work–life interface for diverse managers. This gap is especially surprising considering that managerial roles are defined by unique demands and expectations that likely intersect with the differential life course shifts experienced by men and women, which has the potential to create specific challenges across the work and life domains of managers. The current study aims to address this gap through an intersectional examination of the non-linear effects of age and gender on the work–life balance of managers. Design/methodology/approach: Using a sample of 421 managers, the authors apply statistical tests of the incremental validity of non-linear interaction terms to examine the complex relationship between age, gender and work–life balance. Findings: Results support a non-linear U-shaped main effect of age on leader work–life balance. This effect is moderated by gender, however, with a non-linear U-shaped effect of age on work–life balance being supported for male managers – with female managers displaying no effect of age on work–life balance. Practical implications: Based on these findings, the authors highlight the need for increased availability of flexible schedules and employee empowerment for managers as well as general employees. Originality/value: The current study offers one of the first tests of the intersection of age and gender on the work–family interface of managers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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28. Too much of a good thing: the non-linear effect of vertical pay dispersion on vice presidents' voluntary turnover rate.
- Author
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Xiong, Xiaoguo, Chen, Weihong, and Zhong, Xi
- Subjects
WAGE differentials ,SOCIAL comparison ,BOARDS of directors ,VICE-Presidents ,GOVERNMENT business enterprises - Abstract
Purpose: While the effect of vertical pay dispersion on the voluntary turnover rate of vice presidents (VPs) has received attention, the existing research conclusions are still divided. Therefore, this study aims to explore the relationship between vertical pay dispersion and voluntary turnover rate of VPs in a Chinese context using data from listed firms. Design/methodology/approach: Integrating tournament theory and social comparison theory, this study examines the non-linear effect of vertical pay dispersion on VPs' voluntary turnover rates using empirical data from Chinese A-share listed firms from 2007 to 2016. Findings: The results reveal a U-shaped relationship between vertical pay dispersion and the voluntary turnover rate of VPs. After further incorporating the moderating effect of the board governance structure, the effect is found to be enhanced in firms with more efficient board governance (i.e. smaller board size, higher board turnover and higher proportion of outside directors). Further analysis indicates that the aforementioned conclusions mainly exist in non-state-owned enterprises rather than state-owned enterprises. Originality/value: The findings deepen the understanding of the costs and benefits associated with vertical pay dispersion, enrich the research findings on pay dispersion and contribute to the integration of previously inconsistent findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The effect of international remittances on labour supply in Jordan: an empirical investigation.
- Author
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Al-Assaf, Ghazi
- Subjects
REMITTANCES ,LABOR market ,WAGE differentials ,MARKET surveys ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of the current study is to examine the effect of international remittances on the labour market participation of women and men left behind in Jordan. The study particularly focuses on the labour supply side for both women and men. Design/methodology/approach: The study draws on micro-data from the Jordan Labour Market Panel Survey (JLMPS) in 2010, a nationally representative survey, and addresses the endogeneity of receiving remittances through an Instrumental Variable (IV) approach. Findings: The empirical results indicate that remittances are found to have a negative and significant impact on labour supply of both women and men. On average, women who live in remittance receiving household are about 5% points less likely to perform any market work, 3% points less likely to be in wage employment and about 8% points less likely to be engaged in own work. While, men who live in remittance receiving household are about 25% points less likely to perform any market work, 5% points less likely to be in wage employment and about 10% points less likely to be engaged in own work. When the author instruments for remittance receipt of the household, the effect of remittances on likelihood to work is found larger for both women and men. Originality/value: Workers' remittances are considered as one of the vital financial sources for many households in labour exporting countries, most of the investigation on the effects of such financial flows concentrate on the macroeconomic effects. It is therefore important to conduct empirical investigation to fairly and accurately evaluate the impact of these flows on the Jordanian labour market at a microeconomic level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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30. Does it pay to be green? An exploratory analysis of wage differentials between green and non-green industries
- Author
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Jackman, Mahalia and Moore, Winston
- Published
- 2021
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31. Occupational segregation and wage differentials by gender and race in Brazil: evidence from a quantile decomposition
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Tonet Maciel, Francieli
- Published
- 2021
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32. Gender segregation and wage differentials in India: the role of educational attainment and occupational choices
- Author
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Agrawal, Tushar
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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33. Gender differences in extractive activities: evidence from Ghana.
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Baah-Boateng, William, Twum, Eric Kofi, and Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku
- Subjects
GENDER differences (Sociology) ,SOCIAL impact ,WAGE differentials ,GENDER wage gap ,SEX discrimination against women ,GENDER inequality ,WOMEN'S education ,NEXT Generation Science Standards (Education) - Abstract
Purpose: The study seeks to examine women's participation in Ghana's extractive growth-driven economy and the quality of this participation in terms of employment status and earnings relative to their male counterparts and establish whether these differences constitute discrimination for policy attention. Design/methodology/approach: The study adopts both quantitative and qualitative methodological approaches to assess the extent of gender inequality in employment and earnings in the Ghanaian extractive sector and the sources of these differences. It computes three segregation indices to ascertain the degree of unequal gender distribution of employment based on nationally representative labour force and living standards surveys followed by quantitative analysis of gender earnings differences using Oaxaca–Blinder decomposition technique. This is complemented by the results of Focus Group Discussion to go behind the numbers and examine the sources of the employment and earnings differences between men and women in extractive activities. Findings: The authors observe lower participation of women in the extractive sector, with a considerable degree of gender segregation and existence of gender earnings gap in favour of men due to differences in observable characteristics such as age, education and occupational skills. There is also evidence of existence of discrimination against women and indication of barriers that impede women's involvement in high-earning extractive activities in Ghana. The study suggests measures to remove these barriers and improve women's education particularly in science, technology, engineering and mathematics to address the gender imbalance in extractive activities in Ghana. Social implications: Women's low involvement in the strong extractive growth-driven process has implication for undermining the effort of empowering women economically. Originality/value: The study draws argument from the literature and adopts a combination of quantitative and qualitative techniques to establish gender in terms of employment distribution and earnings in favour of males in the Ghanaian extractive sector. This has the effect of undermining women's economic empowerment and exacerbating gender inequality in the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Effect of industrial structure on urban–rural income inequality in China.
- Author
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Chen, Diandian and Ma, Yong
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,RURAL-urban differences ,WAGE differentials ,INCOME gap ,CORPORATE profits ,RURAL development - Abstract
Purpose: Since 1978, China has made tremendous economic achievements through industrial upgrading. However, these achievements are accompanied by an expanding income gap between rural and urban areas. The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between industrial structure and urban–rural income inequality in China. Design/methodology/approach: Using the fixed-effects model and provincial data for the period 1985–2019, this paper estimates a linear relationship between industrial structure and urban–rural income inequality. By decomposing total income inequality into four components, the paper then analyzes how industrial structure affects each component. Findings: The results show that industrial structure imbalance and industrial upgrading are positively associated with urban–rural income inequality. The positive effect of industrial imbalance mainly comes from widening the wage gap, while that of industrial upgrading mainly comes from aggravating business income inequality and property income inequality. Moreover, industrial balance and upgrading are conducive to increasing the share of wage income at the cost of property income. Originality/value: By progressively examining the total inequality and the inequality of income components, this paper provides a better understanding of how industrial structure affects urban and rural income inequality. The findings of this study highlight the "inequality cost" associated with industrial structure adjustment, which provide policy-related insights on the balance development of urban and rural areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The multi-dimensionality of competitive balance: evidence from European football.
- Author
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Gerrard, Bill and Kringstad, Morten
- Subjects
SOCCER ,REGRESSION analysis ,WAGE differentials ,ATHLETIC leagues ,STATISTICAL correlation ,TEAMS in the workplace ,PROFESSIONAL sports - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to address the problem of designing league regulatory mechanisms given the multi-dimensionality of competitive balance and the proliferation of empirical measures. Design/methodology/approach: A three-stage approach is adopted. Firstly, a taxonomy of empirical measures of competitive balance is proposed, identifying two fundamental dimensions – win dispersion and performance persistence. Secondly, a simple two-team model of league competitive balance is used to explore the dispersion–persistence relationship. Third, correlation and regression analysis of seven empirical measures of competitive balance for the 18 best-attended top-tier domestic football leagues in Europe over the 10 seasons, 2008–2017, are used to (1) validate the proposed categorisation of empirical measures into two dimensions; and (2) investigate the nature of the dispersion–persistence relationship across leagues. Findings: The simple model of league competitive balance implies a strong positive dispersion–persistence relationship when persistence effects increase for big-market teams relative to those for the small-market teams. However, the empirical evidence indicates that while leagues such as the Spanish La Liga exhibit a strong positive dispersion–persistence relationship, other leagues show little or no relationship, and some leagues, particularly, the English Premier League and top-tier divisions in Belgium and Netherlands, have a strong negative dispersion–persistence relationship. The key policy implication for leagues is the importance of understanding the direction and impact of dispersion and persistence effects on the demand for league products. Originality/value: The variability in the strength and direction of the dispersion–persistence relationship across leagues is an important result that undermines the "one-size-fits-all" approach to designing league regulatory mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Evaluating the wage differential between the formal and informal economy: a gender perspective.
- Author
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Williams, Colin and Gashi, Ardiana
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *INFORMAL sector , *WAGES , *WOMEN'S employment , *JOB vacancies , *FINANCE - Abstract
Purpose: Despite a widespread assertion that wages are lower in the informal than formal economy, there have been few empirical evaluations of whether this is the case and even fewer studies of the gender variations in wage rates in the formal and informal economies. Consequently, whether there are wage benefits to formal employment for men and women is unknown. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the wage differential between formal and informal employment for men and women. Design/methodology/approach: To evaluate the wage differential between the formal and informal economy for men and women, data are reported from a 2017 survey involving 8,533 household interviews conducted in Kosovo. Findings: Using decomposition analysis and after controlling for other determinants of wage differentials, the finding is that the net hourly earnings of men in formal employment are 26% higher than men in informal employment and 14% higher for women in formal employment compared with women in informal employment. Practical implications: Given the size of the wage differential, the costs for employers will need to significantly increase in terms of the penalties and risks of detection if informal employment is to be prevented, along with more formal employment opportunities using active labour market policies for vulnerable groups, perhaps targeted at men (who constitute 82.8% of those in informal employment). Originality/value: This is one of the first studies to evaluate the differentials in wage rates in the formal and economy from a gender perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Do anti-discrimination laws alleviate labour market duality?
- Author
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Choi, Hoon
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The gender wage gap and the presence of foreign firms in Vietnam: evidence from unconditional quantile regression decomposition.
- Author
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Nguyen, Dao Dinh, Zhang, Xinran, and Nguyen, Trang Huyen
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *GENDER wage gap , *QUANTILE regression , *SEX discrimination in employment , *SEX discrimination , *STANDARD of living , *VIETNAM veterans - Abstract
Purpose: The objective of this study is to estimate the gender wage gap in Vietnam and its rural and urban areas, especially with the presence of foreign firms. Design/methodology/approach: The authors use cross-sectional data from three rounds of the Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey (VHLSS 2008, 2012, and 2016) to investigate this issue. The unconditional quantile regression and Oaxaca–Blinder (OB) decomposition are used in this article. Findings: The article finds the gender wage gap favouring men, especially in higher quantiles of the wage distribution. The gap in urban Vietnam was higher than in rural areas. The OB decomposition indicates that gender wage gap is mainly driven by gender discrimination. The differences in return to participation in foreign companies only contributed significantly and positively to such a gap in some models. It suggests that the gap in those models is affected by gender discrimination in employment opportunities in foreign companies. Regarding the endowment effect, some models provide the significantly negative impacts of foreign firms on gender wage inequality. Originality/value: The study suggests that policies to reduce the gender wage gap should pay more attention to foreign firms, especially at higher wage classes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The impact of economic freedom on the gender pay gap: evidence from a survey of UK households.
- Author
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Apergis, Nicholas and Lynch, Nicola
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *GENDER wage gap , *ECONOMIC liberty , *ECONOMIC impact , *HOUSEHOLD surveys , *FREE trade , *ECONOMIC research - Abstract
Purpose: Using survey datasets, the purpose of this work explores the impact of economic freedom on the gender pay gap in the UK. Design/methodology/approach: The analysis combines Economic Freedom of the World data with the Understanding Society (USoc) Microdata series. Findings: The results document that economic freedom positively affects the gender pay gap. When the components of the index are considered, the findings indicate different effects of various types of policy, i.e. less government spending, stronger trade liberalization conditions and levels of corruption lead to higher gaps; stronger legal and property rights and a sounder money system have no impact on the gap. Moreover, a stronger impact in the manufacturing industry, part-time workers and those who work in the non-London regions is observed. Practical implications: The findings imply that reductions to government spending programmes can potentially aggravate the gap in hourly wages paid between males and females and should, therefore, be implemented. It may be also possible to provide females the training or education necessary to effectively compete in the workforce, before eliminating any spending programme they rely on. Originality/value: The first study explores the link between economic freedom and gender pay gap through a unique survey dataset with UK households. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Do "inferior" jobs always suffer from a wage penalty? Evidence from temporary workers in Cambodia and Pakistan.
- Author
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Nguyen-Huu, Thanh-Tam
- Subjects
TEMPORARY employees ,WAGE differentials ,INCOME inequality ,TEMPORARY employment ,WAGES ,PAY for performance - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to investigate the wage gap between temporary and permanent workers in Pakistan and Cambodia. Design/methodology/approach: Quantile regression estimator is likely to be the most relevant to the sample. Findings: The estimates indicate the presence of a temporary employment wage penalty in Pakistan and contrarily a wage premium in Cambodia. Moreover, quantile regression estimates show that wage differentials could greatly vary across the wage distribution. The wage gap is wider at the bottom of the wage distribution in Pakistan, suggesting a sticky floor effect that the penalty of being in temporary jobs could be more severe for disadvantaged workers. By contrast, a glass ceilings effect is found in Cambodia, indicating that the wage premium is small at the bottom and becomes high at the top of the pay ladder. Originality/value: Despite the rise of temporary jobs in the past several decades, the empirical evidence on wage differentials between temporary and permanent workers is extremely limited in developing Asian countries. This paper is the first research work that systematically examines the temporary-permanent wage gap in selected Asian countries, based on their National Labor Force Survey data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Envelope wages as a new normal? An insight into a pool of prospective quasi-formal workers in the European Union (EU).
- Author
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Franic, Josip and Cichocki, Stanislaw
- Subjects
WAGE differentials ,WAGES ,MARRIED people ,OLDER people ,BLUE collar workers ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MINIMUM wage - Abstract
Purpose: In spite of millions of quasi-formal workers in the European Union (EU), there is still limited understanding of what motivates workers to participate in these detrimental employment schemes, and why certain groups of workers exhibit higher inclination towards it. This article takes a novel approach by putting prospective envelope wage earners in the centre of this analysis. Design/methodology/approach: Data from the 2019 Special Eurobarometer on undeclared work are used, and two-level random intercept cumulative logit modelling is applied. Findings: One in seven fully declared EU workers would have nothing against receiving one part of their wages off-the-books. Manual workers and individuals whose job assumes travelling are the most willing to accept such kind of remuneration, and the same applies to workers with low tax morale and those who perceive the risk of being detected and persecuted as very small. On the other hand, women, older individuals, married persons and employees from large enterprises express the smallest inclination towards envelope wages. The environment in which an individual operates also plays a non-negligible role as the quality of the pension system and the strength of social contract were also identified as significant determinants of workers' readiness to accept envelope wages. Originality/value: This article fills in the gap in the literature by analysing what workers think about wage under-reporting and what factors drive their willingness to accept envelope wages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Eastern European immigrants in the UK.
- Author
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Rosso, Anna
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *INCOME inequality , *LABOR supply , *WAGE decreases , *RETURN migration ,EUROPEAN Union membership - Abstract
Purpose: The paper aims at examining wage developments among Eastern European immigrants vs UK natives before and after the 2004 enlargement by measuring the extent to which inter-group wage differentials are explainable by these groups' changing attributes or by differences in returns to these characteristics. The enlargement has been a defining moment in British recent history and may have contributed to the unfolding of the events that have culminated in Brexit. Design/methodology/approach: The paper uses a quantitative analysis of the immigrant–native wage gap across the entire distribution by applying the methodology known as the unconditional quantile regression. The analysis is performed before and after the 2004 European Union enlargement to Eastern countries. The data used is the British Labour Force Survey (UK LFS) from 1998 to 2008. Findings: At all distribution points, a major role is played by occupational downgrading, which increases over time. The results further suggest that the decreased wage levels at the top of the distribution stem mainly from low transferability of skills acquired in the source country. Research limitations/implications: The UK LFS does not allow to follow individuals for a long period of time. For this reason, the main limitation of the study is the impossibility to measure for individual-level trajectories in their labour market integration and to account for return migration. Originality/value: The analysis provides a detailed picture of the wage differences between Eastern European immigrants and natives along the whole wage distribution. The paper also identifies possible causes of the wage gap decrease for EU8 immigrant workers after 2008. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Existence of asymmetry between wages and automatable jobs: a quantile regression approach.
- Author
-
Baigh, Tarannum Azim, Yong, Chen Chen, and Cheong, Kee Cheok
- Subjects
QUANTILE regression ,EMPLOYMENT statistics ,POLARIZATION (Economics) ,WAGES ,MINIMUM wage ,WAGE differentials ,OCCUPATIONAL training - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to explore, in the context of Machinery and Equipment sector of Malaysia, the association between average wages and share of employment in automatable jobs, specifically whether the association between average wages and share of employment automatable jobs is asymmetric in nature. Design/methodology/approach: The responses obtained from the structured interview of 265 firms are used to build up the empirical models (conditional mean regression and quantile regression). Findings: The conditional mean regression findings show that employment levels in some low-waged, middle-skilled jobs are negatively associated with average wages. Furthermore, the quantile regression results add that firms that possess higher levels of share of employment in automation jobs are found to have a stronger association to average wages than those possessing a lower share of employment in automation jobs. Practical implications: From the theoretical perspective, the findings of this study add to the body of knowledge of the theory of minimum wages and the concept of job polarization. From a policy perspective, the findings of this study can serve as a critical input to standard setters and regulators in devising industrial and as education policies. Originality/value: Based on the assumption of a constant average policy effect on automatable jobs, conditional mean regression models have been commonly used in prior studies. This study makes the first attempt to employ the quantile regression method to provide a deeper understanding of the relationship between wages and employment in automatable jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Discrimination against refugees in the Palestinian labor market.
- Author
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Morrar, Rabeh and Rios-Avila, Fernando
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *LABOR market , *SOCIAL impact , *INCOME inequality , *PALESTINIAN refugees , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *REFUGEE camps - Abstract
Purpose: This paper examines the level and structure of the wage inequality between nonrefugee and refugee workers in Palestine and the extent to which such wage gap reflects any marginalization and discrimination against refugees. It also investigates how the disparities in distribution to individual worker characteristics contribute to the wage inequality in Palestine. Design/methodology/approach: The authors use both Oaxaca and Blinder (OB) (Oaxaca, 1973 and Blinder, 1973) and Fortin et al. (2011) unconditional quantile decomposition approaches to measure the size of the wage gap along with the wage distribution and to decompose the wage differences into productivity (i.e. explained or the composition effects) and wage structure effects (i.e. unexplained or discrimination effects). Findings: Results indicate that most of the wage gap between refugees and nonrefugees is attributed to the wage structure effect (possibly explained by discrimination) against refugees in the Palestinian labor market. The wage gap between refugees and nonrefugees is not uniform throughout the wage distribution and supports the "sticky floor effect." Practical implications: This work introduces important policy implications for the policymakers in the Palestinian labor market. It reveals the economic and social factors, individual worker characteristics as well as labor market characteristics contribute to the wage inequality in Palestine. Social implications: This research reveals a crucial social challenge in the Palestinian society, represented by the wage discrimination against refugees in Palestine. This is despite the denial of such discrimination from official bodies, local institutions and many other policymakers. It also captures gender inequality between men and women. Originality/value: This is the first empirical work in Palestine that contends with a very sensitive issue in the Palestinian society, that is, the discrimination against refugees in the Palestinian labor market. Most of the existing studies have approached this issue from a humanitarian view in order to show the deterioration of social and economic situations in the refugee camps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
- Full Text
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45. The effects of health on the wages of Australian workers: gender differences and the impacts of macroeconomic conditions.
- Author
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Cai, Lixin
- Subjects
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WAGE differentials , *MINIMUM wage , *WAGES , *OCCUPATIONAL mobility , *WAGE increases , *GENDER , *MALE employees - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of health on wages of Australian workers, with a focus on gender differences and the role of macroeconomic conditions in the effects. Design/methodology/approach: The first 15 waves of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia survey are used to estimate a wage model that accounts for the endogeneity of health, unobserved heterogeneity and sample selection bias. Findings: The results show that, after accounting for the endogeneity of health, unobserved heterogeneity and sample selection bias, better health increases wages for Australian male workers, but not for female workers. The results also show that accounting for the endogeneity of health, unobserved heterogeneity and potential sample selection bias is important in estimating the effects of health on wages. In particular, a simple ordinary least squares estimator would underestimate the effect of health on wages for males, while overestimate it for females, and simply addressing the endogeneity of health using instrumental variables could overestimate the effect for both genders. It is also found that the effects of health on wages fall under depressed macroeconomic conditions, perhaps due to reduced job mobility and increased presentism during a recession. Originality/value: This study adds to the international literature on the effects of health on wages by providing empirical evidence from Australia. The model applied to estimate the effects takes advantage of a panel dataset to address the bias resulting potentially from all the sources of the endogeneity of health, unobserved heterogeneity and sample selection. The results indeed show that failing to address these issues would substantially bias the estimated effects of health on wages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Disability, employment and wages: evidence from Indonesia.
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Caron, Laura
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- *
WAGE differentials , *LABOR supply , *INCOME inequality , *WAGES , *JOB qualifications , *PROPENSITY score matching - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to quantify the labor market outcomes of people with disabilities (PwD) in Indonesia and compares them to people without disabilities. It first studies the labor force participation of PwD before examining the large and persistent wage gaps they face. It explores whether these wage gaps are explained by differences in productivity, a distinction which has important implications for policies addressing these gaps. Design/methodology/approach: The analysis is based on the Indonesian Family Life Survey Wave 5, which includes unique questions allowing for several definitions of disability. Multinomial logistic regression is used to study differences in type of employment for PwD. Wage gaps are estimated and corrected for selection using propensity score matching, supported by a Heckman selection model and Oaxaca–Blinder decomposition. Comparisons with other physically disadvantaged subgroups and the analysis of heterogeneity by job requirements and sector of work explore whether productivity gaps help explain wage gaps. Findings: PwD generally have lower unconditional labor force participation, but disparities largely disappear when controlling for characteristics. Moreover, patterns vary depending on whether the measure of disability used depends on prior medical diagnosis. PwD that do not require prior diagnosis tend to work in more vulnerable employment. When they are employed for wages, people with these types of disabilities face lower wages, up to 22% lower. Meanwhile, (surprisingly) those with medically diagnosed conditions face no difference or a wage premium. This paper finds compelling evidence that, where a wage penalty exists, a substantial part is unexplained by observable characteristics. Originality/value: Previous literature on disability has been mostly based on studies of high-income economies. This paper extends the literature to Indonesia, which differs from high-income contexts due to lack of mental healthcare resources and assistive technologies, as well as weaker rule of law. It provides unique insights based on types of disability and the salient dimensions of disability in the workplace. It also provides evidence that productivity differences do not explain the wage gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. College majors and wages in Turkey: OLS and quantile regression with sample selection correction.
- Author
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Ciftci, Cemil and Ulucan, Hakan
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QUANTILE regression ,COLLEGE majors ,WAGE differentials ,WAGES ,HOUSEKEEPING - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to analyze the wage differentials of the majors in college education in Turkey, which is a country implementing an ongoing expansion in college education in recent years. Design/methodology/approach: The study implements Mincreian wage regression using ordinary least squares, Heckman two-step estimation and quantile regression with sample selection correction by using household labor force surveys of TurkStat from the years 2014–2017. Findings: The findings indicate one of the highest heterogeneity, close to 0.50 log points, between majors in the literature. The within-heterogeneity created by majors is highest among the graduates of social-behavioral sciences, law, biology, physics, mathematics, statistics, computer, engineering and manufacturing, as shown by a 90–10 difference, which is almost 700% for some of these majors. This study shows that the natural science and technical majors that are expected to be more productive and to be paid more fall behind in the wage distribution. Research limitations/implications: Estimation results show that natural science majors, except for subjects allied to medicine and engineering, are paid lower than law and service-sector-related majors. This indicates that the predictions of the skill-biased technical change hypothesis are not valid in the wage profiles in Turkey and that some majors supply more than the sectoral needs. This casts doubts on the effectiveness of the ongoing higher education expansion process of the country. Originality/value: This study contributes to the literature on wage differentials of college majors, an area with limited studies. This is the first study analyzing wage differentials of the field of studies by correcting sample selection bias for the Turkish case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
- Full Text
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48. Estimating the economic return to education in Ghana: a gender-based perspective.
- Author
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Asravor, Richard Kofi
- Subjects
ECONOMICS education ,SOCIAL impact ,RATE of return ,STUDENT organizations ,LABOR market ,WAGE differentials - Abstract
Purpose: The increasing rate at which individuals, especially, females in Ghana are seeking higher education calls for an estimation of the returns to schooling and education in Ghana. Design/methodology/approach: The study employs the Mincer equation to a representative cross-sectional micro-data from Ghana using OLS and instrumental variable (IV) methodologies. The paper uses spouse's education as instruments in the IV estimation. Findings: Return to schooling was found to be higher for females than males, likewise, membership of an old student associations and location of the household. Returns to education increases as the level of education rises whilst the rate of returns initially increases but fall as labour market experience rises. The study also found that the rates of return to education were higher for Christian, followed by Muslim and believers of other lesser-known religion in Ghana. Research limitations/implications: Return to schooling was found to be higher for females than males. Likewise, individuals who are members of an old student association and are in urban areas were found to have a higher return to schooling than individuals who are not members of an old student association and are in rural areas. Returns to education increases as the level of education rises whilst the rate of returns initially increases but fall as labour market experience rises. The study also found that the rates of return to education were higher for Christian, followed by Muslim and believers of other lesser-known religion in Ghana. Practical implications: Wage determination process is different for males and females, across religion and residency. The higher returns to schooling for females imply education is a good investment for women and girls and should be a development priority. Social implications: The higher returns to schooling for females imply an investment in girl's education should be a development priority. Originality/value: The paper extends the existing literature by focussing on the role of religion, old student's association (alma mater) and gender on the differential earning returns to schooling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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49. Public-sector resource allocation since the financial crisis.
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Elliott, Robert, Kopasker, Daniel, and Skåtun, Diane
- Subjects
- *
WAGE differentials , *RESOURCE allocation , *COST of living , *GLOBAL Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 , *FINANCE , *WAGE increases , *FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
Purpose: Distinguishing what employers in different areas of Great Britain need to pay to attract and retain labour has been a central component of public-sector resource allocation decisions. This paper examines how changes in the pattern of spatial wage differentials following the global financial crisis have impacted on the formulae which allocate government funding to local government and health providers in the NHS. Design/methodology/approach: Using employer-reported data on earnings, we examine spatial patterns of private-sector wages in Great Britain between 2007 and 2017. The method permits the analysis of finely defined geographical areas and controls for differences in industry and workforce composition to distinguish those differences that are attributable from unmeasured characteristics, such as differences between areas in the cost of living and amenities. These standardised spatial wage differentials (SSWDs) underpin the funding allocation formulae. Findings: The analysis shows that since 2007 private-sector wage dispersion, both within and between regions, has reduced: lower paid areas have experienced a relative increase in wages and higher paid a relative decline. Over the period, there was a significant reduction in the London wage premium. Originality/value: This paper demonstrates the importance of ensuring established policies are applied using contemporary data. The SSWDs used to distribute government funds have not been re-estimated for some time. As a result, the current resource allocation model has overcompensated the London region and undercompensated others during this period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Differentiation in pay for performance within organizations: an occupational perspective.
- Author
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Williams, Mark, Zhou, Ying, and Zou, Min
- Subjects
- *
PAY for performance , *PERSONNEL management , *HUMAN capital , *WAGE differentials , *SOCIAL impact - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to address the question of why organizations do not uniformly apply pay for performance (PFP) throughout the organization, focusing on the wider occupational structure in which they and the jobs they create are embedded. The authors propose a model of "occupational differentiation" whereby the probability of a job within a given organization having PFP increases with the levels of monitoring difficulty and requisite human asset specificity characterizing the occupation to which a job belongs, being highest in occupations characterized by high levels of both (generally managerial and professional occupations). Design/methodology/approach: Using the Workplace Employment Relations Survey (a nationally representative matched employer–employee dataset for Britain), this paper investigates this question for all 350 occupations delineated by the UK's Office for National Statistics using regression methods that adjust for other confounding factors such as demographic factors and workplace fixed effects. Findings: The authors find organizations "occupationally differentiate" the use of PFP in ways consistent with the model, i.e. PFP is most likely to be found in occupations characterized by both high monitoring difficulty and high requisite human asset specificity (mainly managerial and professional occupations) and least likely in occupations scoring low in both. The finding holds across PFP types (individual, group, organizational), whether organizations are large or small, and hold across most industrial sectors. Research limitations/implications: The main implication of this study is that organizations appear to be taking into consideration whether the wider profession to which a job belongs when implementing PFP, irrespective of their own human resource management strategies and organizational context. There are a few limitations to this study, with the main one being that this model is mainly confined to empirical support is only found in the private sector. The public sector appears to be beyond the reach of the model, where PFP implementation is generally rarer. A second limitation is that the dataset is from 2011 and only covers a single country. Practical implications: Given organizations appear to be implementing PFP based on occupation, this may lead to equity concerns, as different groups are being treated differently within organizations based upon their occupational group. Social implications: As PFP jobs tend to pay more than non-PFP jobs and PFP prevalence has been growing, by being more likely to implement it for generally high-paid groups (generally higher managerial and professional occupations), PFP may contribute to wider pay differentials within and between organizations. Originality/value: By introducing the occupational-level of analysis and the differential nature of tasks across occupational groups, the model offers a new midrange, sociological perspective to understanding intra-organizational dynamics in PFP use and potentially human resource practices more broadly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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