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Differences in decline: quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia

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Differences in decline: quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia. / Goy, Siew Ching; Johnes, Geraint.
In: Singapore Economic Review, Vol. 60, No. 4, 1550054, 01.09.2015.

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Goy SC, Johnes G. Differences in decline: quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia. Singapore Economic Review. 2015 Sept 1;60(4):1550054. doi: 10.1142/S021759081550054X

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Goy, Siew Ching ; Johnes, Geraint. / Differences in decline : quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia. In: Singapore Economic Review. 2015 ; Vol. 60, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{882056dc67534a1c9b64b360f9cd3f9a,
title = "Differences in decline: quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia",
abstract = "Semiparametric estimation has gained significant attention in the study of wage inequality between men and women in recent years. By extending the wage gap at the mean towards the entire wage distribution using quantile regression, it enables researchers to ascertain the direction and the proportions of differences in characteristics and returns to these characteristics at different parts of the wage distribution. This line of research has been prominent in western society but has not yet been explored in the context of the Malaysian labor market. To fill the gap, this paper examines the gender earnings gap in Malaysia between 1994 and 2004 using Malaysia Population and Family Survey data. The gender earnings differential, as measured by the log percentage point is 53% in 1994. The difference reduces to 45% for a restricted sample and 42% for the unrestricted sample in 2004. However, it was found that the gender wage gap reduces as we move up the wage distribution. This suggests that women suffer from a sticky floor effect, i.e., the gender wage gap is bigger at the bottom of distribution. More importantly, the observed gender wage differentials do not reflect differences in the productive characteristics of the workers. In fact, it accounts for very little, if any, of the gap in Malaysia. However, the extent of the price effect is larger at the bottom end of the distribution than at the top.",
keywords = "Earnings, discrimination, gender, WAGE DISCRIMINATION, SEX-DISCRIMINATION, UNITED-STATES, GAP, DECOMPOSITION",
author = "Goy, {Siew Ching} and Geraint Johnes",
year = "2015",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1142/S021759081550054X",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
journal = "Singapore Economic Review",
issn = "0217-5908",
publisher = "WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Differences in decline

T2 - quantile regression of male-female earnings differential in Malaysia

AU - Goy, Siew Ching

AU - Johnes, Geraint

PY - 2015/9/1

Y1 - 2015/9/1

N2 - Semiparametric estimation has gained significant attention in the study of wage inequality between men and women in recent years. By extending the wage gap at the mean towards the entire wage distribution using quantile regression, it enables researchers to ascertain the direction and the proportions of differences in characteristics and returns to these characteristics at different parts of the wage distribution. This line of research has been prominent in western society but has not yet been explored in the context of the Malaysian labor market. To fill the gap, this paper examines the gender earnings gap in Malaysia between 1994 and 2004 using Malaysia Population and Family Survey data. The gender earnings differential, as measured by the log percentage point is 53% in 1994. The difference reduces to 45% for a restricted sample and 42% for the unrestricted sample in 2004. However, it was found that the gender wage gap reduces as we move up the wage distribution. This suggests that women suffer from a sticky floor effect, i.e., the gender wage gap is bigger at the bottom of distribution. More importantly, the observed gender wage differentials do not reflect differences in the productive characteristics of the workers. In fact, it accounts for very little, if any, of the gap in Malaysia. However, the extent of the price effect is larger at the bottom end of the distribution than at the top.

AB - Semiparametric estimation has gained significant attention in the study of wage inequality between men and women in recent years. By extending the wage gap at the mean towards the entire wage distribution using quantile regression, it enables researchers to ascertain the direction and the proportions of differences in characteristics and returns to these characteristics at different parts of the wage distribution. This line of research has been prominent in western society but has not yet been explored in the context of the Malaysian labor market. To fill the gap, this paper examines the gender earnings gap in Malaysia between 1994 and 2004 using Malaysia Population and Family Survey data. The gender earnings differential, as measured by the log percentage point is 53% in 1994. The difference reduces to 45% for a restricted sample and 42% for the unrestricted sample in 2004. However, it was found that the gender wage gap reduces as we move up the wage distribution. This suggests that women suffer from a sticky floor effect, i.e., the gender wage gap is bigger at the bottom of distribution. More importantly, the observed gender wage differentials do not reflect differences in the productive characteristics of the workers. In fact, it accounts for very little, if any, of the gap in Malaysia. However, the extent of the price effect is larger at the bottom end of the distribution than at the top.

KW - Earnings

KW - discrimination

KW - gender

KW - WAGE DISCRIMINATION

KW - SEX-DISCRIMINATION

KW - UNITED-STATES

KW - GAP

KW - DECOMPOSITION

U2 - 10.1142/S021759081550054X

DO - 10.1142/S021759081550054X

M3 - Journal article

VL - 60

JO - Singapore Economic Review

JF - Singapore Economic Review

SN - 0217-5908

IS - 4

M1 - 1550054

ER -