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2.
Nat Hum Behav ; 7(2): 184-189, 2023 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36424396

RESUMO

Extant research on the gender pay gap suggests that men and women who do the same work for the same employer receive similar pay, so that processes sorting people into jobs are thought to account for the vast majority of the pay gap. Data that can identify women and men who do the same work for the same employer are rare, and research informing this crucial aspect of gender differences in pay is several decades old and from a limited number of countries. Here, using recent linked employer-employee data from 15 countries, we show that the processes sorting people into different jobs account for substantially less of the gender pay differences than was previously believed and that within-job pay differences remain consequential.


Assuntos
Ocupações , Salários e Benefícios , Masculino , Humanos , Feminino , Fatores Sexuais
3.
Soc Sci Res ; 101: 102622, 2022 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34823675

RESUMO

We conceptualize within-organization job mobility as a position-taking process, arguing that the structure and outcome of claims over positions are characteristics of organizational inequality regimes. Drawing on data from 10 distribution centers from a large U.S. firm, we examine gendered job mobility as the observed network of workers moving among jobs. Results from network analysis and meta-regression reveal that in the firm examined, workers tend to move between jobs with similar gender compositions, that mobility lattices tend to be more ladder-like for male-concentrated jobs but more circuitous for female-concentrated jobs, and that there is less upward mobility overall in organizations with higher levels of wage inequality. Both organization level inequalities and the relationship between positions within organizations condition mobility. While we do not observe discursive claims on positions, we argue that these are the underlying mechanisms driving gendered job mobility.


Assuntos
Identidade de Gênero , Salários e Benefícios , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Organizações
4.
PLoS One ; 15(9): e0237970, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32903268

RESUMO

Germany has experienced sharply rising earnings inequalities, both between and within workplaces. Working from prior literature on rising employment dualization and the fissuring of workplaces into high and low wage employers, we explore a set of organizational explanations for rising between and within workplace inequality focusing on the role of employment dualization, skill segregation/complexity, and firm fissuring. We describe and model these hypothesized processes with administrative data on a large random sample panel of German workplaces. We find that rising inequalities are associated with polarization in industrial wage rates and the birth of new low wage workplaces, as well as increased establishment skill specialization and the growth of part-time jobs in workplace divisions of labor. We conclude with recommendations for future research that directly examines more proximate mechanisms and their relative importance in different institutional contexts.


Assuntos
Eficiência Organizacional , Emprego/economia , Renda/estatística & dados numéricos , Salários e Benefícios/estatística & dados numéricos , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Local de Trabalho/normas , Adulto , Emprego/tendências , Feminino , Alemanha , Humanos , Masculino , Fatores de Tempo
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(17): 9277-9283, 2020 04 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32284412

RESUMO

It is well documented that earnings inequalities have risen in many high-income countries. Less clear are the linkages between rising income inequality and workplace dynamics, how within- and between-workplace inequality varies across countries, and to what extent these inequalities are moderated by national labor market institutions. In order to describe changes in the initial between- and within-firm market income distribution we analyze administrative records for 2,000,000,000+ job years nested within 50,000,000+ workplace years for 14 high-income countries in North America, Scandinavia, Continental and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and East Asia. We find that countries vary a great deal in their levels and trends in earnings inequality but that the between-workplace share of wage inequality is growing in almost all countries examined and is in no country declining. We also find that earnings inequalities and the share of between-workplace inequalities are lower and grew less strongly in countries with stronger institutional employment protections and rose faster when these labor market protections weakened. Our findings suggest that firm-level restructuring and increasing wage inequalities between workplaces are more central contributors to rising income inequality than previously recognized.


Assuntos
Países Desenvolvidos/economia , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Emprego/economia , Emprego/tendências , Europa (Continente) , Ásia Oriental , Humanos , Renda/tendências , Oriente Médio , América do Norte , Ocupações/economia , Salários e Benefícios/tendências , Países Escandinavos e Nórdicos , Local de Trabalho/psicologia
6.
Soc Sci Res ; 80: 15-29, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30955553

RESUMO

The study of temporal dynamics is essential to the advance of social science. In the study of inequality, preliminary to explaining patterns in gaps between groups is the prior task of detecting those patterns. Developing a multiple latent trajectory strategy, this paper proposes an inductive approach to the detection of inequality trends. Investigating managerial representation for Black men, Black women, White women and White men in a very large panel sample of private sector workplaces, we show that trajectories of managerial representation for each status group are much more complex than the common deductive approach leads us to believe. In fact, the volatility and the multiplicity of trajectories is one of the markers of enduring disadvantage for African Americans. Further, we demonstrate that current organizational inequality explanations can be employed and improved within this inductive methodology. The findings underscore the importance of interaction and contingency in the production of inequalities, in agreement with relational approaches to organizational inequality.

7.
AJS ; 120(4): 1095-143, 2015 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26046226

RESUMO

The authors propose a strategy for observing and explaining workplace variance in categorically linked inequalities. Using Swedish economy-wide linked employer-employee panel data, the authors examine variation in workplace wage inequalities between native Swedes and non-Western immigrants. Consistent with relational inequality theory, the authors' findings are that immigrant-native wage gaps vary dramatically across workplaces, even net of strong human capital controls. The authors also find that, net of observed and fixed-effect controls for individual traits, workplace immigrant-native wage gaps decline with increased workplace immigrant employment and managerial representation and increase when job segregation rises. These results are stronger in high-inequality workplaces and for white-collar employees: contexts in which one expects status-based claims on organizational resources, the central causal mechanism identified by relational inequality theory, to be stronger. The authors conclude that workplace variation in the non-Western immigrant-native wage gaps is contingent on organizational variationin the relative power of groups and the institutional context in which that power is exercised.


Assuntos
Emigrantes e Imigrantes , Salários e Benefícios , Etnicidade , Humanos , Fatores Socioeconômicos , Suécia , Local de Trabalho
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