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Title: How Gender Segregation in Higher Education Contributes to Gender Segregation in the U.S. Labor Market

Citation Type: Journal Article

Forthcoming?: Yes

ISSN: 1533-7790

DOI: 10.1215/00703370-10653728

PMID: 37036180

Abstract: What is the relationship between gender segregation in higher education and gender segregation in the labor market? Using Fossett's (2017) difference-of-means method for calculating segregation indices and data from the American Community Survey, we show that approximately 36% of occupational segregation among college-educated workers is associated with gender segregation across 173 fields of study, and roughly 64% reflects gender segregation within fields. A decomposition analysis shows that fields contribute to occupational segregation mainly through endowment effects (men's and women's uneven distribution across fields) than through the coefficient effects (gender differences in the likelihood of entering a male-dominated occupation from the same field). Endowment effects are highest in fields strongly linked to the labor market, suggesting that educational segregation among fields in which graduates tend to enter a limited set of occupations is particularly consequential for occupational segregation. Within-field occupational segregation is higher among heavily male-dominated fields than other fields, but it does not vary systematically by fields' STEM status or field-occupation linkage strength. Assuming the relationship between field segregation and occupational segregation is at least partly causal, these results imply that integrating higher education (e.g., by increasing women's representation in STEM majors) will reduce but not eliminate gender segregation in labor markets.

Url: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37036180/

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Zheng, Haowen; Weeden, Kim A.

Periodical (Full): Demography

Issue:

Volume:

Pages: 1-24

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Gender, Labor Force and Occupational Structure

Countries:

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