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Measuring the effect of institutional change on gender inequality in the labour market
[journal article]
Abstract This article examines the differential impact of labour market institutions on women and men. It carries out longitudinal analyses using repeat cross-sectional data from the EU Labour Force Survey 1992–2007 as well as time series data that measure institutional change over the same period. The resul... view more
This article examines the differential impact of labour market institutions on women and men. It carries out longitudinal analyses using repeat cross-sectional data from the EU Labour Force Survey 1992–2007 as well as time series data that measure institutional change over the same period. The results contribute to the literature on gendered employment, adding important insights into the impact of labour market institutions over and above family policies that have been the focus of most prior studies on the topic. We find differential effects of institutional change on male and female outcome. Our findings challenge the neo-classical literature on the topic. While our results suggest that men benefit more clearly than women from increases in employment protection, we do not find support for the neo-classical assertion that strong trade unions decrease female employment. Instead, increasing union strength is shown to have beneficial effects for both men's and women's likelihood of being employed on the standard employment contract. Furthermore, in line with other researchers, we find that rising levels of in kind state support to families improve women's employment opportunities.... view less
Keywords
labor market; inequality; gender-specific factors; protection of employee rights; women's employment; labor market policy; family policy; institutional change; type of employment; EU
Classification
Labor Market Research
Women's Studies, Feminist Studies, Gender Studies
Free Keywords
European Labour Force Survey (1992-2007); collective bargaining coverage; employment protection; gender inequality
Document language
English
Publication Year
2015
Page/Pages
p. 59-75
Journal
Research in Social Stratification and Mobility (2015) 39
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/261287
ISSN
1878-5654
Status
Postprint; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0