The gender lifetime earnings gap—exploring gendered pay from the life course perspective

Christina Boll, Malte Jahn, A. Lagemann
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

Research on the gender earnings divide so far mostly focuses on the gender gap in hourly wages, which due to its snapshot nature is unable to capture the biographical dimension of gendered pay. With the ‘gender lifetime earnings gap’ (GLEG), we introduce a new measure that fills this gap. Based on a group of 72,085 German individuals born 1950-64 from the ‘Sample of Integrated Labor Market Biographies’ (SIAB 7510), we find that at the end of the employment career, women accumulate 46.6% less earnings than men. Thus, the GLEG is more than twice as high as the current German gender pay gap. The GLEG is higher at the bottom than at the top of the earnings distribution. It most prominently widens during the period of family formation (age 25-35). Relatedly, gender differences in endowments, mainly in terms of experience and hours, account for almost two-thirds of the GLEG. For younger cohorts, family breaks tend to lose importance, whereas the role of work hours remains unchanged. Moreover, women in younger cohorts approach men with respect to employment, education and sector premiums.
性别终身收入差距——从生命历程视角探讨性别薪酬
到目前为止,关于性别收入差距的研究主要集中在小时工资的性别差距上,由于其快照性质,无法捕捉性别工资的传记维度。通过“性别终身收入差距”(GLEG),我们引入了一种新的衡量标准来填补这一差距。根据“综合劳动力市场传记样本”(SIAB 7510)对72,085名出生于1950-64年的德国人的调查,我们发现,在职业生涯结束时,女性的收入比男性少46.6%。因此,GLEG是目前德国性别工资差距的两倍多。收入分配底部的GLEG高于收入分配顶部。它在家庭形成时期(25-35岁)最为显著地扩大。与此相关的是,捐赠方面的性别差异,主要是在经验和工作时间方面,几乎占到GLEG的三分之二。对于年轻人来说,家庭休息时间往往失去了重要性,而工作时间的作用保持不变。此外,年轻群体中的妇女在就业、教育和部门保险费方面接近男子。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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