Sex Segregation and Wage Gaps in East and West Germany

CERGE-EI Working Paper 202

Posted: 17 Feb 2003

See all articles by Stepan Jurajda

Stepan Jurajda

CERGE-EI; IZA Institute of Labor Economics; Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic

Heike Harmgart

Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin

Date Written: November 28, 2002

Abstract

In this paper we examine occupational and firm-level sex segregation and their relationship with wages in West Germany and in East Germany, where anti-discrimination policies were recently implemented. We employ a representative sample of social-security wage records from 1992 and 1995, including a matched employer-employee sub-sample. We find large differences in the size of the wage gap, but not in the degree of segregation across the two parts of Germany. In contrast to U.S. literature German wages are not lower in predominantly female occupations. Conditioning on unobservable taste and labor quality differences, there is a small wage impact of sex segregation in both parts of Germany. Finally, by 1992 the East German wage structure appears as stable as that of West Germany.

Suggested Citation

Jurajda, Stepan and Harmgart, Heike, Sex Segregation and Wage Gaps in East and West Germany (November 28, 2002). CERGE-EI Working Paper 202, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=377600

Stepan Jurajda (Contact Author)

CERGE-EI ( email )

Politickych veznu 7
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Czech Republic

HOME PAGE: http://www.cerge-ei.cz

IZA Institute of Labor Economics ( email )

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Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic ( email )

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Economics Institute
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Czech Republic

Heike Harmgart

Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin ( email )

Unter den Linden 6
D-10178 Berlin, AK 10099
Germany

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