Webinar: Flexible Wages, Bargaining, and the Gender Wage Gap
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Series
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Speaker(s)Heather Sarsons (University of Chicago, United States)
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FieldEmpirical Microeconomics
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LocationOnline
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Date and time
May 04, 2020
16:00 - 17:00
To participate, please register here.
Existing
evidence suggests that women fare worse than men in situations where
they are required to bargain over a prize. Does the introduction of
individual pay negotiations in industries historically characterized by
rigid salaries disproportionately penalize women? We study this question
by focusing on teachers in the aftermath of Wisconsin's Act 10, a 2011
state bill which dramatically redefined the rules of collective
bargaining for public sector unions. Before Act 10, teacher pay was
strictly determined on the basis of seniority and academic credentials
using salary schedules, negotiated between each school district and the
teacher's union. After Act 10, unions lost the authority to bargain
over the schedule and districts became free to set teachers' pay more
flexibly and on an individual basis. Using variation in the timing of
expiration of collective bargaining agreements, we estimate the effect
of the introduction of flexible pay on the difference in salaries of
male and female teachers with similar seniority and education. We show
that the introduction of flexible pay led to a significant decline in
women's salaries relative to their male counterpart. This decline is not
driven by a differential propensity for women to move across districts,
differences in ability, or a higher scarcity of male teachers. The gap,
however, appears larger in schools with male principals and districts
with a male superintendent. Results from a survey of Wisconsin teachers
confirms that female teachers are less likely to negotiate pay compared
with their male counterparts, especially when their superintendent is a
man, because they do not feel comfortable doing so. Joint with Barbara Biasi.