Quelle: University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP); Cambridge (RECOUP Policy Brief, 6), 2009. 6 S
Inhalt: Gender gaps in educational access, schooling quality and labour market outcomes are pervasive in Pakistan. This brief discusses the findings of three recent studies in Pakistan that highlight the role of education in improving individual productivity, increasing earnings, bringing people out of poverty and providing a pathway to gender equality in the labour market. The papers note the policy implications of the research both for education and labour market policy.
Beantwortung des Fragenkatalogs zu der öffentlichen Anhörung des Ausschusses für Familie, Senioren, Frauen und Jugend zum Thema "Entgeltgleichheit zwischen Frauen
und Männern"
Autor/in:
Ziegler, Astrid
Quelle: Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliches Institut in der Hans-Böckler-Stiftung; Düsseldorf, 2009. 15 S
Schlagwörter:Federal Republic of Germany; Lohnunterschied; wage difference; gender-specific factors; woman; Mann; man; Einkommensunterschied; difference in income; Diskriminierung; discrimination
SSOAR Kategorie:Arbeitsmarktforschung, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Public-private sector segmentation in the labour market in Pakistan
Autor/in:
Aslam, Monazza; Kingdon, Geeta
Quelle: Journal of Asian Economics, 20 (2009) 1, S 34-39
Inhalt: This study investigates public–private sector wage differentials for male and female waged employees in Pakistan. This is done using latest nationally representative data from the Pakistan Living Standards Measurement Survey (PSLM) 2005. We adopt three methodologies to obtain robust estimates of the wage differential and the results reveal that public sector workers enjoy large wage premia. The gross pro-public wage differential is much larger for women than for men. Our findings also show that while private and public sector workers' differing characteristics 'explain' a larger proportion of the private–public wage gap for men, this is not the case for women.
Schlagwörter:Arbeitsmarkt; privater Sektor; private sector; Pakistan; wage difference; öffentlicher Sektor; Lohnunterschied; public sector; Mann; woman; South Asia; Südasien; gender-specific factors; man; Pakistan; labor market; public-private sector; labour market
SSOAR Kategorie:Arbeitsmarktforschung, Entwicklungsländersoziologie, Entwicklungssoziologie, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Geschlechtsspezifische Arbeitszeitmuster im internationalen Vergleich
Autor/in:
Grau, Silke
Quelle: Universität Potsdam, Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät, Lehrstuhl für Methoden der empirischen Sozialforschung; Potsdam (Potsdamer Beiträge zur Sozialforschung, 29), 2008. 58 S
Schlagwörter:gender-specific factors; Frauenerwerbstätigkeit; women's employment; Arbeitszeit; working hours; Gleichstellung; affirmative action; Gleichstellungspolitik; equal opportunity policy; Lebensunterhalt; livelihood; soziale Sicherung; social security; Arbeitszeitpolitik; policy on working hours; Erwerbsbeteiligung; labor force participation; berufstätige Frau; working woman; Geschlechtsrolle; gender role; Teilzeitarbeit; part-time work; Vollbeschäftigung; full employment; soziale Ungleichheit; social inequality; Benachteiligung; deprivation; Familienpolitik; family policy; internationaler Vergleich; international comparison
SSOAR Kategorie:Arbeitsmarktforschung, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Do Austrian Men and Women Become more Equal? At Least in Terms of Labor Supply!
Autor/in:
Wernhart, Georg; Winter-Ebmer, Rudolf
Quelle: Österreichisches Institut für Familienforschung an der Universität Wien; Wien (Working Paper / Österreichisches Institut für Familienforschung, 71), 2008. 15 S
Inhalt: Similar to most industrialized countries, female labor supply in Austria has been increasing for the last decades, while labor force participation for men has been constant or even somewhat declining. This working paper - in cooperation with the University of Linz - provides an insight into wage elasticities concerning work participation and weekly hours for Austrian men and women between 1987 and 1999. It presents the almost continuous reduction in the labor supply reactions of married women. While their elasticity was still several times larger at the beginning of the 1980s, they approached rapidly the much less elastic behavior of men. These developments are important for the analysis of deadweight losses of taxation as well as the effects of tax reforms and wage subsidy programs. In this paper we differentiate between married and never-married women; which is very important in explaining labour force participation. As these differences are negligible for men we refrain from this distinction. Labor supply elasticities give an impression about attachment to the labor force; very high elasticities of (married) women have often been interpreted as evidence for low labor force attachment and a traditional family role model: the male bread-winner model where female market participation was considered as supplementary and more volatile. Due to increasing educational attainment of women, developments on the marriage market - lower marriage and higher divorce rates - and most importantly changing social roles and norms, it can be expected that this traditional male-breadwinner model will have considerably lost its importance.
Schlagwörter:Gleichberechtigung; equality of rights; Mann; man; woman; Arbeitskräfte; manpower; Erwerbsbeteiligung; labor force participation; Lohnunterschied; wage difference; Lohn; wage; Heirat; wedding; Arbeitsangebot; labor supply; Bildungsniveau; level of education; gender-specific factors; Rollenwandel; role change; Österreich; Austria
SSOAR Kategorie:Arbeitsmarktforschung, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
The educational attainment of the second generation in Germany: social origins and ethnic inequality
Titelübersetzung:Die Schulleistungen der zweiten Generation in Deutschland: soziale Herkunft und ethnische Ungleichheit
Autor/in:
Kristen, Cornelia; Granato, Nadia
Quelle: Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung der Bundesagentur für Arbeit (IAB); Nürnberg (IAB Discussion Paper: Beiträge zum wissenschaftlichen Dialog aus dem Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung, 4/2007), 2007. 33 S
Inhalt: Anhand von Daten aus dem deutschen Mikrozensus werden die Schulleistungen der zweiten Generation von Einwanderern in Deutschland untersucht. Der Fokus liegt dabei auf den Nachkommen der klassischen Gastarbeiter. Die Ergebnisse belegten, dass es beim Erreichen des höchsten Schulabschlusses, dem Abitur, große ethnische Differenzen gibt. Ausländische Jugendliche der zweiten Generation, vor allem Türken und Italiener, sind gegenüber gleichaltrigen Deutschen stark benachteiligt. Hieraus ergibt sich die zentrale Frage, inwieweit diese Unterschiede auf die soziale Herkunft zurückzuführen sind. Die Ergebnisse lassen vermuten, das ethnische Benachteiligungen in erster Linie auf soziale Ursachen, und nicht auf ethnische Ungleichheiten zurückzuführen sind. Eine Ausnahme bilden italienische Jugendliche. (IAB)
Inhalt: "With the German Microcensus we study the second generation’s educational attainment in Germany focusing on the descendants of classic labour migrants. Our results show that educational outcomes in terms of attending or completing the highest schooling track leading to the Abitur considerably vary among different ethnic groups. Second generation young adults, in particular Turks and Italians, experience pronounced disadvantages in comparison to their German peers. The central question in this context is to what extent ethnic stratification in the German school system is related to educational and social background. Our findings suggest that ethnic disadvantages primarily result from social rather than from specific ethnic inequalities, since initial differences in the chances of attaining the Abitur disappear after considering educational and social origin, the only exception being Italian young adults." [author's abstract]
Schlagwörter:Ausländer; alien; Kind; child; zweite Generation; second generation; Schulleistung; academic achievement; Schulabschluss; school graduation; soziale Herkunft; social background; Auswirkung; impact; Bildungsniveau; level of education; Jugendlicher; adolescent; Abitur; secondary school graduation certificate; Quote; quota; ethnische Gruppe; ethnic group; Mikrozensus; microcensus; Bildungschance; educational opportunity; Türke; Turk; Italiener; Italian; Benachteiligung; deprivation; Minderheit; minority; Jugoslawe; Yugoslavian; Grieche; Greek; Spanier; Spaniard; Portugiese; Portuguese; Einwanderung; immigration; gender-specific factors; alte Bundesländer; old federal states; Federal Republic of Germany
SSOAR Kategorie:Bildungs- und Erziehungssoziologie, Migration, Arbeitsmarktforschung
Understanding employment systems from a gender perspective: pitfalls and potentials of new comparative analytical frameworks
Titelübersetzung:Beschäftigungssysteme aus einer Genderperspektive verstehen: Fallstricke und Möglichkeiten neuer komparativer analytischer Rahmenbedingungen
Autor/in:
Shire, Karen; Gottschall, Karin
Quelle: Universität Bremen, Zentrum für Sozialpolitik; Bremen (ZeS-Arbeitspapier, 5/2007), 2007. 39 S
Inhalt: "Unter dem Einfluss von Globalisierung, Wohlfahrtsstaatstransformation und politischen und gesellschaftlichen Umbrüchen sind nationale Arbeitsmärkte in fortgeschrittenen Marktökonomien erheblichen Veränderungen ausgesetzt. In geschlechtssensibler Perspektive wird deutlich, dass hier nicht nur Deregulierung von Beschäftigung sondern auch Re-Regulierung eine Rolle spielt, ebenso wie Arbeitsmarktdynamiken auch durch Veränderungen im Geschlechterverhältnis beeinflusst sind. Diese Komplexität des Wandels stellt eine Herausforderung für die vergleichende Arbeitsmarkt- und Wohlfahrtsstaatsforschung dar, in deren Typisierung von Arbeitsmarktregimes Geschlechterverhältnisse nur begrenzt Berücksichtigung finden. Vor diesem Hintergrund fragen die Autorinnen, wie in einschlägigen neueren Ansätzen zur Analyse von Arbeitsmärkten Wandel von Beschäftigungssystemen und Geschlechterverhältnissen konzipiert wird. Im Mittelpunkt stehen drei prominente komparatistisch ausgerichtete Konzepte: der polit-ökonomische Ansatz 'Varieties of Capitalism' (Hall/ Soskice 2001), die mikro-ökonomische Theorie von Beschäftigungssystemen von David Marsden (1999) und Neil Fligstein's wirtschaftssoziologischer Ansatz 'The architecture of markets' (2001). Wie die Ergebnisse zeigen, unterscheiden sich die Ansätze in der Identifikation von relevanten Akteuren (Betriebe, Beschäftigte, Staat) ebenso wie in der Rolle, die Ausbildungsinstitutionen für die Strukturierung von Arbeitsmärkten zugeschrieben wird. Damit ergeben sich für die Analyse von geschlechtsspezifischen Aspekten von Beschäftigung unterschiedliche blinde Flecken und Erkenntnispotentiale." (Autorenreferat)
Inhalt: "Economic globalization, welfare state transformation as well as political and social change on national and supranational level impact on national labor markets in advanced societies in complex ways. From a gender perspective, these dynamics of change entail deregulation as well as re-regulation of employment systems and at the same time are triggered by shifts in gender relations. Addressing this complexity poses challenges to scholarly research comparing employment systems and systemizing cross-national variations of labor market regimes which tend to neglect gender relations as a relevant factor of change. This context sets the framework for our question on how ongoing changes in employment systems and in gender relations are taken up in recent scholarship. We focus on three approaches prominent in the mainstream scholarly debate which address the current state of employment systems in advanced economies in comparative perspective spanning from political economy to micro economics and economic sociology, namely the Varieties of Capitalism (VOC) approach (Hall/ Soskice 2001), Marsden's micro-economic theory of employment systems (1999) and Fligstein's work 'The architecture of markets' (2001). The approaches differ in the assignment of agency (to firms, employees and the state) as well as in the assessment of the role of educational institutions for shaping employment systems. They thus dispose of different pitfalls and potentials for analyzing the gendered character of change of employment systems." (author's abstract)
Rates of return to education by gender in Pakistan
Autor/in:
Aslam, Monazza
Quelle: University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, Research Consortium on Educational Outcomes and Poverty (RECOUP); Cambridge (RECOUP Working Papers, 1), 2007. 41 S
Inhalt: Differential labour market returns to male and female education are one potential explanation for large gender gaps in education in Pakistan. We empirically test this explanation by estimating private returns to education separately for male and female wage earners. This paper contributes to the literature by using a variety of methodologies (Ordinary Least Squares, Heckman correction, 2SLS and household fixed effects) in order to consistently estimate economic returns to education. Earnings function estimates reveal a sizeable gender asymmetry in economic returns to education, with returns to women's education being substantially and statistically significantly higher than men's. However, a decomposition of the gender wage gap suggests that there is highly differentiated treatment by employers. We conclude that the total labour market returns are much higher for men, despite returns to education being higher for women. This suggests that parents may have an investment motive in allocating more resources to boys than to girls within households.
Gender differentiation in higher education: educational specialization and labour market risks in Spain and Germany
Titelübersetzung:Genderunterschiede in der höheren Bildung: bildungsbezogene Spezialisierung und Arbeitsmarktrisiken in Spanien und Deutschland
Autor/in:
Reimer, David; Steinmetz, Stephanie
Quelle: Universität Mannheim, Mannheimer Zentrum für Europäische Sozialforschung (MZES); Mannheim (Arbeitspapiere / Mannheimer Zentrum für Europäische Sozialforschung, 99), 2007. 38 S
Inhalt: The objective of this paper is to investigate the relationship between gender differentiation in tertiary education and labour market hazards. We analyze how differences between male and female tertiary graduates in the chosen degree level and field of study affect the likelihood to be unemployed or obtain a low status job. In order to learn about the role of institutional context, we compare Germany and Spain, two countries that differ with respect to horizontal (field of study) and vertical (degree level) segregation by gender as well as to the linkage between the education and labour market system. Using Labour Force Survey data from the year 2000, our results of logistic regression models as well as a non-linear decomposition technique generally confirm our expectation that the field of study explains a sizable portion of the gender gap in unemployment and low status jobs in both countries. Whereas the level of tertiary degree does not matter with respect to unemployment in either country, it explains part of the female disadvantage in holding a low status job in Spain. Moreover, our analyses show that women with a degree in a predominantly male field of study are not systematically disadvantaged compared to men. Finally, even though the role of the institutional context is hard to evaluate, it seems that, for the two selected countries, the horizontal and vertical gender segregation is more relevant in Spain than in Germany.' [author's abstract]