民主工人所有的公司中性别、种族和移民身份的不平等:来自该行业首次全国调查的证据

Sarah Reibstein, Laura Hanson Schlachter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

工人合作社的实践者和开发者经常声称,民主的工人所有制促进了工作场所内外的平等主义,但美国的大多数经验证据都是基于人种学案例研究或小规模调查。这项研究旨在利用第一次关于个人在这些独特公司的经历的全国性调查,来测试在更广泛的行业中存在的性别、种族和移民身份不平等。设计/方法/方法该研究使用了2017年的一项调查,该调查包括来自82家公司的1147名员工。本研究的重点是工作场所福利的衡量指标,包括物质和心理所有权、财富积累、工资、工作场所自治和参与治理。本研究使用具有固定效应的普通最小二乘回归模型和混合模型来确定性别、种族、移民身份以及性别和种族的交集对公司内部和公司之间这些结果的影响。这项研究没有发现工人合作社内部存在性别、种族或移民身份差异的证据,而是用工作类型、任期和工人所有制来解释公司内部的薪酬差异。尽管如此,本研究仍记录了按性别、种族和移民身份划分的全行业物质和非物质成果差异,反映了个人层面人力资本和工作特征的差异,以及普遍存在的职业隔离和同质性。本文通过在美国工人合作社收集的最强大的数据集中分析种族、性别和移民身份,为参与式公司的工作场所赋权和不平等的文献做出了新颖的贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inequalities in democratic worker-owned firms by gender, race and immigration status: evidence from the first national survey of the sector
PurposeWorker cooperative practitioners and developers often claim that democratic worker ownership advances egalitarianism within and beyond the workplace, but most of the empirical evidence in the USA is based on ethnographic case studies or small-scale surveys. This study aims to leverage the first national survey about individuals' experiences in these unique firms to test for the presence of inequalities by gender, race and immigration status in the broader sector.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses a 2017 survey comprising a sample of 1,147 workers from 82 firms. This study focuses on measures of workplace benefits that capture material and psychological ownership, wealth accumulation, wages, workplace autonomy and participation in governance. This study uses ordinary least squares regression models with fixed effects alongside pooled models to determine the effects of gender, race, immigration status and the intersection of gender and race on these outcomes, both within and between firms.FindingsThis study finds no evidence of wage gaps by gender, race or immigration status within worker cooperatives, with job type, tenure and worker ownership status instead explaining within-firm variation in pay. Still, this study documents sector-wide disparities in material and non-material outcomes by gender, race and immigration status, reflecting differences in individual-level human capital and job characteristics as well as widespread occupational segregation and homophily.Originality/valueThe paper offers a novel contribution to the literature on workplace empowerment and inequality in participatory firms by analyzing race, gender and immigration status in the most robust dataset that has been collected on worker cooperatives in the USA.
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