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Fuchs, Victor R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1971
The differential is large: on average, women earn only 60 percent as much as men. (Editor)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Salary Wage Differentials, Sex Differences, Wages

Cohen, Malcolm S. – Journal of Human Resources, 1971
The most important reason for the difference in the average pay of men and women is the clustering of women in lower paying jobs. (Author)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Salary Wage Differentials, Sex Differences, Social Discrimination

Osmond, Marie Withers – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1984
Questions whether sex-role attitudes raised income in Acock and Edwards' sample (1982:587) and provides evidence which supports the thesis that occupational structure (not attitudes) determines female income. Concluded that the current challenge for sociologists appears to lie in finding and exploring the middle ground between these two…
Descriptors: Career Ladders, Employed Women, Employment Opportunities, Salaries
Norwood, Janet L. – 1982
In the last 20 years, an increase in the number of working women has been accompanied by changes in the female labor force and in the concentration of women in particular occupations and industries. These changes have a profound effect upon women's earnings. The Current Population Survey (CPS) shows a wide disparity in the median earnings of women…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Education, Employed Women, Females
Hartmann, Heidi; Whittaker, Julie – 1998
Since 1979, the wage gap between women and men has narrowed significantly, falling by more than 10 percent overall. The closing of the wage gap has slowed considerably in the 1990's, however, with women's real wages (adjusted for inflation) stagnating in recent year and men's wages continuing to decline. The lack of growth in both women's and…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
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
National Committee on Pay Equity, Washington, DC. – 1990
Women have made slow, steady progress in the labor market since 1979, but the wage gap has not narrowed significantly. This briefing paper updates a September 1987 paper based on "Male-Female Differences in Work Experience, Occupations, and Earnings: 1984" (Current Population Reports, Household Economic Studies, Series P-70, No. 10, issued in…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Research, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Bernhardt, Annette; Dresser, Laura; Hill, Catherine – 2000
A study used data from the 1998 Current Population Survey to document job growth in the public and private sectors and examine the quality of jobs in terms of wages and benefits. Findings indicated public sector employment declined for both women and men during the period from 1979-98 with a somewhat sharper decline among men. In 1998, median…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Blacks, Economics, Employed Women
Sandell, Steven H.; Shapiro, David – 1978
Based on the National Longitudinal Surveys of Young Women aged fourteen to twenty-four in 1968, a study was made to determine the impact that women's ex ante labor market expectations have on their salary and development and to examine the effect of women's postschool training and maturation (human capital accumulation) on wages. Six findings…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Expectation, Human Capital, Human Development
Roos, Patricia A. – 1982
Differences in the occupational attainment patterns of men and women were investigated by using data from 12 industrial societies. The sample consisted of employed persons 20 to 64 years of age working full- or part-time in the United States, Australia, Denmark, Finland, West Germany, Great Britain, Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Norway, Sweden,…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Educational Background, Employed Women, Employment Level
Oaxaca, Ronald L. – 1971
This study is a cross-section regression analysis of male-female wage differentials in urban labor markets. Data for the study were obtained from the 1967 Survey of Economic Opportunity. A prime objective of this dissertation is to determine how much of the observed male-female wage differential can be attributed to the effects of discrimination…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Economic Opportunities, Employed Women, Labor Market

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

Berger, Mark C. – Journal of Human Resources, 1983
Models of aggregate production are estimated and used to investigate the effects of changes in labor force composition on the recently observed decline in the earnings of college graduates relative to other workers and on the fall in the earnings of younger workers relative to older workers. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Graduates, Economic Factors, Employed Women

MacLeod-Gallinger, Janet E. – American Annals of the Deaf, 1992
Discrepancies in labor force, occupation, and earnings outcomes were observed between men and women in a follow-up study of 4,900 deaf high school graduates. Deaf women were found to pursue a relatively narrow range of programs. Deaf women with less than a bachelor's degree experienced high underemployment and unemployment relative to deaf men and…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Development, Comparative Analysis, Deafness
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1970
This booklet on women workers of minority races includes all races in a minority other than white, Negroes constituting about 90 percent of all persons other than white in the United States; Spanish-speaking persons are included in the white population. The following topics are encompassed; labor force participation; unemployment; marital status;…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Characteristics, Employed Women
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