交叉点和共性:利用匹配分解德国按性别和出生率划分的工资差距

IF 4.4 2区 社会学 Q1 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Maximilian Sprengholz, Maik Hamjediers
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引用次数: 2

摘要

我们根据西德的调查数据,通过比较移民女性、移民男性、土著女性和土著男性的工资,调查了性别和出生地之间的交叉工资差距。为了增加该领域的分析多样性,我们对群体工资进行了全面比较,以强调特权和劣势的相关性,并使用了非参数匹配分解,该分解非常适合于解决独特的群体特定体验。我们发现,与性别和出生维度相关的工资(dis)优势是不可相加的,并导致每次成对比较的不同分解模式。在考虑了工作依恋、个人资源和职业隔离方面的巨大群体差异后,无法解释的工资差距在移民女性、移民男性和土著女性之间的比较通常很小,但在任何一个群体与土著男性相比时都很大。这一发现表明,移民女性通常被认为是“双重劣势”,而不是本土男性的“双重优势”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intersections and Commonalities: Using Matching to Decompose Wage Gaps by Gender and Nativity in Germany
We investigate intersecting wage gaps by gender and nativity by comparing the wages between immigrant women, immigrant men, native women, and native men based on Western German survey data. Adding to the analytical diversity of the field, we do a full comparison of group wages to emphasize the relationality of privilege and disadvantage, and we use a nonparametric matching decomposition that is well suited to address unique group-specific experiences. We find that wage (dis)advantages associated with the dimensions of gender and nativity are nonadditive and result in distinct decomposition patterns for each pairwise comparison. After accounting for substantial group differences in work attachment, individual resources, and occupational segregation, unexplained wage gaps are generally small for comparisons between immigrant women, immigrant men, and native women, but large when either group is compared to native men. This finding suggests that the often presumed “double disadvantage” of immigrant women is rather a “double advantage” of native men.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
24.10%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: For over 30 years, Work and Occupations has published rigorous social science research on the human dynamics of the workplace, employment, and society from an international, interdisciplinary perspective. Work and Occupations provides you with a broad perspective on the workplace, examining international approaches to work-related issues as well as insights from scholars in a variety of fields, including: anthropology, demography, education, government administration, history, industrial relations, labour economics, management, psychology, and sociology. In addition to regular features including research notes, review essays, and book reviews.
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