Full- and part-time work and wages : an application to two countries
Abstract
This thesis investigates the extent of the wage differentials between
females working full- and part-time in Australia and the United States, the
causes of these differentials and the effect these differentials have on the
aggregate ratio of female to male wages in both countries.
The thesis contributes to existing knowledge in three ways. Firstly, it
documents the magnitude and sign of the male/female wage ratio and the
full/part-time wage ratio for countries which include Australia and the United
States. For both Australia and the United States, the average male wage per
hour was estimated to exceed the average female wage per hour. For the
United States, consistent with evidence from other international evidence,
wages of full-time workers were estimated to exceed those of part-time
workers. However, for Australia, part-time hourly wages were estimated to
exceed full-time hourly wages by around 20 percent.
Secondly, this thesis draws upon the theories of human capital,
segmented labour markets and efficiency wage to develop a model which
explains individual's wages. From this model, the roles of human capital
endowments, sample selection, occupations and institutions in determining the
wage differential between full- and part-time workers was estimated. For
Australia, differences in the endowments were not found to be an important
factor in determining the causes of the wage differential between full- and
part-time workers. For the United States, however, differences in the level of
endowments were estimated to be important in explaining the wage
differential between females working full- and part-time. Sample selection
effects were estimated to be important in explaining the wage differential
between females working full- and part-time in both countries. This effect was interpreted as indicating that in Australia, higher hourly wages are
inducing ’better' quality workers into the part-time labour market.
Unexplained differences (such as discrimination and productivity differences)
were also found to be important in explaining the wage differential between
females working full- and part-time in the United States, but not in Australia.
This finding lead us to examine the role of occupations and institutions in
explaining the full- and part-time wage differential.
Thirdly, an estimate of the effect of part-time work and wages on the
overall wage ratio between males and females was undertaken. For Australia,
including part-time workers explicitly into the gender wage analysis decreased
the gender wage differential estimate derived for full-time workers by 5
percentage points to 19 percent. For the United States, explicitly including
part-time workers into an estimate of the gender wage differential increased
the estimate from the full-time gender wage analysis by 4 percentage points to
40 percent.
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