Industrial Composition, Bargaining, and the Gender Wage Gap: Evidence from US Cities

Type Working Paper
Title Industrial Composition, Bargaining, and the Gender Wage Gap: Evidence from US Cities
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2009
URL https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Benjamin_Sand/publication/228960111_Industrial_Composition_Barg​aining_and_the_Gender_Wage_Gap_Evidence_from_US_Cities/links/00b4952af32e110423000000.pdf
Abstract
We propose, and empirically evaluate, a theory of the labor market in which
differences in pay between otherwise identical workers arise as a consequence of
(endogenous) differences in bargaining conditions. We use the model to help explain
trends in the gender wage gap, and explore the plausibility of the theory by
employing a city-level analysis using U.S. census data for the 1970-2007 period.
We address potential endogeneity by exploiting the time dimension of the data,
as well via instrumental variables methods. We find considerable support for the
model: bargaining effects are correct-signed and significant in virtually all speci-
fications, and our preferred estimates indicate that bargaining effects are roughly
of the same magnitude as mechanical composition effects.

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