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Titre : | Cross-National Analysis+ (2017) |
Auteurs : | Laetitia Hauret ; Donald R. Williams |
Type de document : | Article : document Ă©lectronique |
Dans : | Industrial Relations (vol. 56, n° 2, April 2017) |
Article en page(s) : | pp. 203â235 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
Thésaurus CEREQ DIVISION SEXUELLE DU TRAVAIL ; FEMME ; REPRESENTATION DU TRAVAIL ; UNION EUROPEENNE ; COMPARAISON INTERNATIONALE ; COMPARAISON ; ANALYSE DES DONNEES |
RĂ©sumĂ© : | Research over the past two decades has found significant gender differences in subjective job satisfaction, with the result that women report greater satisfaction than men in some countries. This paper examines the so-called âgender paradoxâ using data from the European Social Survey for a subset of fourteen countries in the European Union. We focus on the hypothesis that women place higher values on certain work characteristics than men, which explains the observed differential. Using estimates from Probit and ordered Probit models, we conduct standard BlinderâOaxaca decompositions to estimate the impact that differential valuations of characteristics have on the gender difference in self-reported job satisfaction. The results indicate that females continue to report higher levels of job satisfaction than do men in some countries, and the difference remains even after controlling for a wide range of personal and job characteristics and working conditions. The decompositions suggest that a relatively small share of the gender differential is attributable to gender differences in the weights placed on working conditions in most countries. Rather, gender differences in job characteristics contribute relatively more to explaining the genderâjob satisfaction differential.(source: report) |
Document Céreq : | Non |
En ligne : | http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/irel.12171/abstract |