Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/2856
Author(s)
Heilmann, Lisanne
Gal, Iddo
Grotlüschen, Anke
Journal Title
Gender : Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft
Year of publication
2020
Volume
12
Issue number
3
Page reference
107–123
Language
englisch
Abstract
This paper looks at men’s and women’s positions in the labour market and relates them to their basic skills. In a meritocratic society higher skills are supposed to relate to higher outcomes. We question whether this relation is equally true for men and women. Using data for 13 countries from the OECD Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC), an international large-scale assessment, this paper examines monthly wages and a person’s probability to be in a managerial position. Our analyses show that, on average, men with higher skills get higher wages and have a higher probability to be in a managerial position than women with equally high skills. We show that the relation between skills and outcomes is more proportional for men than for women and that the gender pay gap does apply to women and men with similar skills. In addition, the results highlight a gap in managerial positions between men and women with the same basic skills.
Subject
Arbeitsmarkt
basic skills
Einkommen
gender bias
income inequality
labour market discrimination
PIAAC
basic skills
Einkommen
gender bias
income inequality
labour market discrimination
PIAAC
Publication type
Zeitschriftenartikel
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