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Mellor, Earl F.; Haugen, Steven E. – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
This article focuses on earnings as a pure wage paid to the employee--stripped of any effects of tips, premium pay for overtime, bonuses, and commissions. It discusses median hourly earnings and earnings distribution (those receiving $12.00 or more per hour, minimum and subminimum wage workers). (CT)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Statistics, Individual Characteristics, Minimum Wage
Smith, Michal – State Government News, 1987
Without an increase in five years, minimum wage workers, 60 percent of whom are women, have experienced a sharp decline in real earnings. Over seventeen million Americans fall outside the federal provision and rely on inadequate state standards. Overtime and tipping laws are discussed. Social costs of maintaining the "working poor" outweigh…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Economically Disadvantaged, Employed Women, Employment Practices
Goldin, Claudia – New Perspectives, 1985
Despite the great influx of women into the labor market, the gap between men's and women's wages has remained stable at 40 percent since 1950. Analysis of labor data suggests that this has occurred because women's educational attainment compared to men has declined. Recently, however, the wage gap has begun to narrow, and this will probably become…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Educational Attainment, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
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Jackson, Linda A. – Journal of Social Issues, 1989
Discusses how gender differences in the value of pay, based on relative deprivation theory, explain women's paradoxical contentment with lower wages. Presents a model of pay satisfaction to integrate value-based and comparative-referent explanations of the relationship between gender and pay satisfaction. Discusses economic approaches to the…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Cultural Influences, Economic Factors, Employed Women
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1990
The earnings gap is the difference between the percentage ratio of women's earnings to those of men and 100 percent. In 1988, the earnings gap for hourly earnings was 26 percent; for weekly earnings, 30 percent; and for annual earnings, 34 percent. Although the direction over the past decade is toward greater equality, the pace is extremely slow.…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Choice, Career Education, Comparable Worth
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1987
From 1977 to 1983, the number of sole proprietorships operated by women increased from 1.9 to 3.3 million. The number of self-employed women--the majority of whom are sole proprietors--continued to grow. In 1982 the median earnings of self-employed women were substantially lower than those of wage and salary women workers and self-employed men.…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Level, Entrepreneurship
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Grossman, Allyson Sherman; Hayghe, Howard – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Mothers receiving money for child support were found to be in the labor force more often than those not awarded such support. Women who received alimony were also more likely to work than those who did not receive such payments. (CT)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Labor Force Nonparticipants, Mothers, Salary Wage Differentials
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Mellor, Earl F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1985
This report presents 1983 annual average weekly earnings of wage and salary workers (both men and women) who usually work full time (excluding the "incorporated self-employed") in more than 200 occupations, according to the classification system developed for the 1980 Census of Population. (Author)
Descriptors: Artists, Athletes, Clerical Occupations, Employed Women
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Jones, Ethel B.; Kniesner, Thomas J. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1980
Updates a 1976 article explaining the stability of hours of work per week in the U.S. since World War II. It introduces a revised series of the ratio of female to male wages over time. In a reply to this article, Kniesner presents estimates which support his 1976 conclusions. (CT)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics, Females
Social and Labour Bulletin, 1980
Recent developments in equal pay, equal employment opportunities, women's involvement in trade unions, and the impact of women's work on family life and national development are reviewed. (SK)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Practices, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Salary Wage Differentials
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Stinson, John F., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
The data on multiple jobholders are examined by the author. He finds a particularly sharp increase in the number of women with two jobs, which is another sign of the growing strength of their ties to the job market. Nearly five percent of working women are now multiple jobholders. (CT)
Descriptors: Black Employment, Career Exploration, Demography, Economic Factors
Paukert, Liba – 1984
This report examines the major trends in women's employment and unemployment over the past two decades in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development member countries. Employment and unemployment trends in the labor force by sex are first considered. The report next examines the growth of the female labor supply and the trends in the…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment, Employment Patterns, Females
Kolde, Rosemary F. – Vocational Education Journal, 1985
Discusses the increase of women in the labor force; the role of divorce, the women's movement, and marriage at a later age; older women in the work force; economic factors; the kinds of jobs women hold and the earnings they receive; and the implications for vocational education. (CT)
Descriptors: Divorce, Economic Factors, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
National Commission on Working Women, Washington, DC. – 1987
This fact sheet addresses pay equity, that is, the goal of a fair wage-setting process that eliminates sex and race discrimination. It begins by setting forth the problem through statistics on men's and women's median annual earnings, the occupational categories represented by women workers, and median annual earnings by occupation. A glossary is…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Education, Comparable Worth, Employed Women
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Major, Brenda – Journal of Social Issues, 1989
Addresses the role of comparison processes in the persistence of the gender wage gap, its toleration by those disadvantaged by it, and resistance to comparable worth as a corrective strategy. Argues that gender segregation and undercompensation for women's jobs leads women to use different comparison standards when evaluating what they deserve.…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Cultural Influences, Employed Women, Employment Practices
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