Title of article
Male White-Black Wage Gaps, 1979-1994: A Distributional Analysis
Author/Authors
William M. Rodgers III، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
21
From page
773
To page
793
Abstract
This paper examines whether the "stretching" (increased variance of wages) of the skill distribution during the 1980s explains the growth in within-group white-black wage gaps. The paper also develops a skill-specific decomposition that measures the stretchingʹs contribution to the wage gapʹs growth at various skill levels of the distribution. The "local" nature of the skill-specific decomposition breaks the correlation between changes in the position of blacks in the white residual distribution and changes in the variance of wages, thus yielding unbiased estimates of the degree to which the stretching explains changes in the wage gap. The paper shows that if the wage distributionʹs stretching is an important contributor to the overall wage gapʹs growth, its greatest impact is at the middle and upper portions of the skill distribution. For wage gaps within education and experience categories, the stretchingʹs contribution is greatest at the tails of the skill distributions.
Journal title
Southern Economic Journal
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Southern Economic Journal
Record number
709728
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