Wage Determination and Discrimination Among Older Workers
Author(s) -
Joseph F. Quinn
Publication year - 1979
Publication title -
journal of gerontology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2331-3323
pISSN - 0022-1422
DOI - 10.1093/geronj/34.5.728
Subject(s) - residence , human capital , wage , race (biology) , sample (material) , demographic economics , earnings , labour economics , vocational education , psychology , economics , sociology , gender studies , chemistry , chromatography , economic growth , pedagogy , accounting
In this study, the determinants of the wage rates of a large sample of individuals aged 58 to 63 are first analyzed. Second, an explanation for the large discrepancies existing between the average wage rates earned by whites and nonwhites and by men and women is attempted. Human capital and geographic variables were found to be important wage determinants. Education, vocational training, years of job tenure, health, region of residence and local cost of living were significant explanators, especially for whites. Differences in these variables, however, cannot completely explain the wage differentials that exist by race and sex. There is a large unexplained component (especially in the male-female comparison) offering evidence of race and sex discrimination among older workers. In the case of sex discrimination, much of the problem appears to be occupational segregation--the crowding of women into low paying industries and occupations.
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