Regardless of the progress made towards gender equality, women and men nonetheless face completely different labour market circumstances in any respect ranges of employment, not least at prime administration positions. Even feminine managers profitable at breaking the glass ceiling are rewarded lower than their male friends. The economics literature has uncovered ample proof of gender bias. Geiler and Renneboog (2015) discover that feminine prime managers in listed UK corporations earn some 23% lower than their male counterparts, whereas Bell (2005) paperwork a bias between 8% and 25% for feminine executives in US-listed corporations, after controlling for variations in firm dimension, occupational title, and business. Bertrand and Hallock (2001) reveal a forty five% hole in US corporations, decreased to about 5% after accounting for observable variations, the place gender segregation by agency dimension performs a vital function.
Gender inequality comes at an financial value, as proven in Lagarde and Ostry (2018) and Cavalcanti and Tavares (2007, 2015) from a macroeconomic perspective and in Criscuolo et al. (2021) from a agency productiveness perspective. Additional understanding the pay hole between female and male managers is thus essential to make substantial progress towards gender equality. It’s also important to facilitate correct laws design mitigating the distinction as analysed in research akin to Djankov and Goldberg (2021) and Bagues and Esteve-Volart (2007). In any case, it’s probably that the productiveness value of gender discrimination is, if something, increased because it pertains to managerial positions.
In a latest examine (Sazedj and Tavares 2021b), we advance the prevailing literature on the gender pay hole amongst prime managers by addressing a but undocumented supply of divergence: the distinction in skilled networks. Utilizing a matched employer-employee dataset with necessary data on all personal corporations and wage-earners working in Portugal between the years 1986 and 2017, we observe the complete skilled historical past of a employee and thus compute a measure of networks based mostly on all previous skilled interactions, throughout the similar agency, specifically with co-workers who later develop into prime managers. Whereas in Sazedj and Tavares (2021a), we present that networks certainly play a vital function within the wage-setting means of prime executives, in Sazedj and Tavares (2021b), we handle the associated and essential query of assessing how these variations in skilled networks contribute to the gender pay hole on the prime.
Determine 1 exhibits how, in 1995, the full pay of feminine prime managers stood solely barely above a mere two thirds of male managers’ pay. That’s, for every euro earned by a male supervisor, a feminine supervisor earns 32 cents much less. Though the gender pay hole for prime managers has narrowed by greater than 10 proportion factors within the 23-year interval of our examine, that doesn’t essentially stem from a lower in discrimination. By 2017, feminine pay represented nearly 4 fifths of male wages. Nevertheless, after we take observable traits into consideration, together with age, tenure, and schooling, and compute an ‘adjusted’ gender pay hole (represented by the dashed line in Determine 1), we discover that the catch up in wages of feminine prime managers is solely because of the catching up in expertise, with no discount within the unexplained element of the wage distinction, generally equated with gender discrimination (Cardoso et al. 2016). Our outcomes are according to the findings of Azamat and Petrongolo (2014), who doc that, though the gender hole in schooling has closed and even reversed in lots of international locations, the gender bias in pay, employment ranges, or alternatives has not vanished. Moreover, after we think about variations in managers´ networks (represented by the dotted line in Determine 1), we discover that networks are essential in explaining a big fraction of the gender pay hole.
Determine 1 The gender pay hole over time
Bigger networks facilitate entry to corporations with extra beneficiant compensation insurance policies
Estimating a wage equation with high-dimensional fastened results and utilizing the Gelbach decomposition technique, we will unambiguously decompose the contribution of every supply of the noticed gender pay hole amongst prime managers. Our outcomes are offered in Determine 2. Bearing in mind the managers’ observable traits of age, tenure, and schooling, which clarify roughly 4.1 proportion factors of the pay hole, we present how a major fraction of the remaining gender pay hole is defined by heterogeneity in corporations’ compensation insurance policies, as captured by agency fastened results. In different phrases, the sorting of managers into corporations, the place male prime managers segregate into corporations with extra beneficiant pay insurance policies, accounts for nearly 7.5 proportion factors of the pay hole. Put in another way, a random allocation of managers throughout corporations, one such that feminine managers would not be disproportionately allotted to corporations with decrease compensation, would scale back the gender pay hole on the prime by one third. Apparently, we additionally estimate that greater than 50% of this agency sorting channel derives from variations in networks, as better-connected managers, usually male managers, have entry to increased paying corporations.
Lastly, we discover that managers’ unobserved everlasting traits, captured by supervisor fastened results, clarify the remaining two thirds of the gender pay hole. These unobserved supervisor traits (unobserved from the researcher’s viewpoint), may be equated each with unobserved expertise but in addition with types of gender discrimination not related to sorting of managers throughout corporations.
Determine 2 Decomposing the gender pay hole on the prime
The gender composition of networks additionally issues: Females assist females
Having established the important thing function of managers’ networks in explaining the gender pay hole amongst prime managers, we additional examine how feminine managers can greatest leverage their networks to beat gender segregation throughout corporations. We look at the function of each community dimension in addition to community gender composition. First, we discover no proof in any respect of a special function of community dimension for female and male managers. But, and importantly, we do uncover that community gender composition has vital and completely different results for feminine and male managers.
Determine 3 depicts the outcomes of three completely different exams, run individually for female and male managers. We account for the next community traits: the gender composition of networks, when it comes to quantity (higher panel); the gender composition of the networks, with a bigger weight given to extra highly effective connections (center panel); and the gender composition of networks, giving a bigger weight to nearer/deeper connections (decrease panel).
Determine 3 The worth of gender-specific connections
Notice: The dots characterize the estimated coefficients from a propensity rating matching process, whereas the strains characterize the 90% confidence interval. The crimson/blue figures refer to three completely different regressions run on the pattern of feminine/male prime managers. A damaging worth suggests managers profit extra from female-dominant networks, a constructive worth the other.
We deal with episodes of job transitions and use a propensity rating process to check prime managers with male-dominant networks to managers with female-dominant networks, after controlling for supervisor traits. We discover that, when it comes to wage positive factors, each genders profit extra from male than from feminine connections (higher panel). Nevertheless, this result’s biased by the truth that strongest prime managers are male. As soon as we account for the ability of the connections – when it comes to the dimensions of the corporations they handle – we discover that feminine prime managers profit equally from male or feminine dominated networks, whereas male managers proceed to learn extra from male connections (see center panel). Lastly, we think about the depth of the connections by attributing a better weight to connections with whom one has labored for an extended interval and/or in smaller corporations, which we think about a proxy for the ‘internal circle’ of the supervisor. Doing so, we discover that each feminine and male managers profit most from connections to managers of their very own gender. In sum, the closest community connections appear to learn largely managers of the identical gender. Extra particularly, feminine managers can profit from having shut connections with different feminine managers.
Our outcomes exhibit how, in a male-dominated company world, gender bias could also be perpetuated. In mild of the prevailing male over-representation in management roles and the bias in the direction of benefiting our friends, the function of feminine networks for feminine managers is a vital, but undocumented, truth. Insurance policies that favour elevated feminine presence in management positions are prone to have quantifiable and vital spillovers, by facilitating the entry of extra girls to prime managing jobs. The precise type of these insurance policies – quotas, mentorship packages, or options is a vital object of additional analysis.
References
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