Who Cares - And Does It Matter? Measuring Wage Penalties for Caring Work

B. Hirsch, Julia Manzella
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

Economists and sociologists have proposed arguments for why there can exist wage penalties for work involving helping and caring for others, penalties borne disproportionately by women. Evidence on wage penalties is neither abundant nor compelling. We examine wage differentials associated with caring jobs using multiple years of Current Population Survey (CPS) earnings files matched to O*NET job descriptors that provide continuous measures of 'assisting and caring' and 'concern' for others across all occupations. This approach differs from prior studies that assume occupations either do or do not require a high level of caring. Cross-section and longitudinal analyses are used to examine wage differences associated with the level of caring, conditioned on worker, location, and job attributes. Wage level estimates suggest substantive caring penalties, particularly among men. Longitudinal estimates based on wage changes among job switchers indicate smaller wage penalties, our preferred estimate being a 2 percent wage penalty resulting from a one standard deviation increase in our caring index. We find little difference in caring wage gaps across the earnings distribution. Measuring mean levels of caring across the U.S. labor market over nearly thirty years, we find a steady upward trend, but overall changes are small and there is no evidence of convergence between women and men.
谁在乎——这有关系吗?衡量关怀工作的工资处罚
经济学家和社会学家提出了一些论点,来解释为什么会存在对那些涉及帮助和照顾他人的工作的工资惩罚,而这种惩罚不成比例地由女性承担。关于工资处罚的证据既不充足,也不令人信服。我们使用多年的当前人口调查(CPS)收入文件来检查与护理工作相关的工资差异,这些文件与O*NET职位描述相匹配,这些职位描述提供了所有职业中“帮助和照顾”和“关心”他人的持续衡量标准。这种方法不同于先前的研究,即假设职业需要或不需要高水平的关怀。横断面和纵向分析用于检查工资差异与关心水平,条件下的工人,地点和工作属性。对工资水平的估计表明,对照顾他人的惩罚是实质性的,尤其是对男性而言。基于工作转换者工资变化的纵向估计表明,工资惩罚较小,我们的首选估计是2%的工资惩罚,这是由于我们的关怀指数增加了一个标准差。我们发现在关心不同收入分配的工资差距方面差别不大。衡量近三十年来美国劳动力市场的平均关怀水平,我们发现一个稳步上升的趋势,但总体变化很小,没有证据表明女性和男性之间趋同。
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