Perpetuating Inequality: What Salary History Bans Reveal About Wages

James Bessen, Chen Meng, Erich Denk
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Pay gaps for women and minorities have persisted after accounting for observable differences. Why? If employers can access applicants’ salary histories while bargaining over wages, they can take advantage of past inequities, perpetuating inequality. Recently, a dozen US states have banned employer access to salary histories. We analyze the effects of these salary history bans (SHBs) on employer wage posting and on the pay of job changers in a difference-in-differences design. Following SHBs, employers posted wages more often and increased pay for job changers by about 5%, with larger increases for women (8%) and African-Americans (13%). Salary histories appear to account for much of the persistence of residual wage gaps.
持续的不平等:工资历史禁令揭示了什么
考虑到可观察到的差异,女性和少数族裔的薪酬差距仍然存在。为什么?如果雇主在讨价还价时可以获得求职者的薪资历史,他们就可以利用过去的不平等,使不平等永久化。最近,美国十几个州禁止雇主获取工资历史记录。我们分析了这些工资历史禁令(SHBs)对雇主工资发布和换工作者薪酬的影响。继中小企业之后,雇主更频繁地发布工资,并为跳槽者加薪约5%,其中女性(8%)和非洲裔美国人(13%)的加薪幅度更大。工资历史似乎在很大程度上解释了剩余工资差距的持续存在。
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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