Does it get better? A quasi-cohort analysis of sexual minority wage gaps
Auteurs: Sean Waite
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
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Résumé (anglais)
Highlights * Labor markets are stratified by gender and sexual orientation. * Canadian Census and National Household Survey data from 2001, 2006 and 2011. * There is little evidence that sexual minority wage gaps have attenuated since 2001. * Wage gaps are largest for younger gay men and older lesbians, relative to heterosexuals. * Intra-household decision making does not explain coupled gay men’s disadvantage. Abstract With few exceptions, it has been found that gay men earn less and lesbians earn more than their heterosexual counterparts. Most of the current literature has used single cross-sectional datasets to test possible sources of these wage differentials. This study adds to this literature by presenting a theoretical framework, grounded in gender theory, to explore: (a) whether sexual minority wage gaps have attenuated over the last decade, (b) whether wage gaps vary by age group, and (c) if wage gaps vary with duration in the labor market. Using Canadian census and survey data, this study finds no evidence that wage gaps have attenuated for gay men and only small reductions for lesbians and heterosexual women, relative to heterosexual men. Wage gaps are larger for younger gay men than for older gay men, which may suggest a “coming out penalty”. The lesbian wage premium, vis-á-vis heterosexual women, does not appear at initial labor market entry; rather it develops with duration in the labour market.
Détails
Type | Article de journal |
---|---|
Auteur | Sean Waite |
Année de pulication | 2015 |
Titre | Does it get better? A quasi-cohort analysis of sexual minority wage gaps |
Volume | 54 |
Nom du Journal | Social Science Research |
Numéro | November |
Pages | 113-130 |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- Sean Waite
- Sean Waite
- Does it get better? A quasi-cohort analysis of sexual minority wage gaps
- Social Science Research
- 54
- 2015
- November
- 113-130