Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Ekaterina Selezneva, Philippe Van Kerm
In: Journal of Economic Inequality 14 (2016), 1, 21-40
This paper provides a new examination of the gender pay gap for Germany based on a family of distribution-sensitive indicators. Wage distributions for men and women do not only differ by a fixed constant; differences are more complex. We show that focusing on the bottom of the wage distribution reveals a larger gender gap. Our distribution-sensitive analysis can also be used to study whether the statistical disadvantage of women in average pay might be ‘offset’ by lower inequality. Over a broad range of plausible preferences over inequality, we show however that ‘inequality-adjusted’ estimates of the gap can be up to three times higher than standard inequality-neutral measures in Eastern Germany and up to fifty percent higher in Western Germany. Using preference parameters elicited from a hypothetical risky investment question in our sample, inequality-adjusted gender gap measures turn out to be close to those upper bounds.
Themen: Persönlichkeit, Gender, Arbeit und Beschäftigung
Keywords: gender gap, wage differentials, wage inequality, expected utility, risk aversion, East and West Germany, SOEP, Singh-Maddala distribution, Copula-based selection model
Externer Link:
http://www.diw.de/documents/publikationen/73/diw_01.c.426597.de/diw_sp0579.pdf
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10888-016-9320-z