Part-time employment, the gender wage gap and the role of wage-setting institutions: Evidence from 11 European countries.
Authors
Publication date
- MATTEAZZI Eleonora
- PAILHE Ariane
- SOLAZ Anne
2017
Publication type
Journal Article
Summary
We examine how far the over-representation of women in part-time jobs can explain the gender gap in hourly earnings, and also investigate how far wage-setting institutions are correlated with the overall gender wage gap and the female part-time wage gap. Using European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) 2009 data for 11 European countries, we implement a double decomposition of the gender wage gap: between men and women employed full-time and between full-time and part-time working women. This shows that the wage penalty of women employed part-time occurs mainly through the segregation of part-time jobs, but the full-time gender pay gap remains mostly unexplained. At the macro level, the gender wage gap tends to be higher in countries where part-time employment is more widespread. Some wage-setting institutions seem to reduce the female full-time/part-time pay gap and the gender gap among full-time workers.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
- Comparaison internationale / International comparison
- Niveau de salaire / Wage level
- Différence entre sexes / Sex differentials
- Genre / Gender
- Temps de travail / Working time
- Travail à temps partiel / Part-time work
- Travail des femmes / Female employment
- Autriche / Austria
- Belgique / Belgium
- Finlande / Finland
- France
- Allemagne / Germany
- Italie / Italy
- Pays-Bas / Netherlands
- Norvège / Norway
- Pologne / Poland
- Espagne / Spain
- Royaume-Uni / United Kingdom
- Europe
Themes detected by scanR from retrieved publications. For more information, see https://scanr.enseignementsup-recherche.gouv.fr