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Title: Trends in the earnings gender gap among dentists, physicians, and lawyers

Citation Type: Journal Article

Publication Year: 2017

Abstract: Background: The authors examined the factors associated with sex differences in earnings for 3 professional occupations. Methods: The authors used a multivariate Blinder-Oaxaca method to decompose the differences in mean earnings across sex. Results: Although mean differences in earnings between men and women narrowed over time, there remained large, unaccountable earnings differences between men and women among all professions after multivariate adjustments. For dentists, the unexplained difference in earnings for women was approximately constant at 62% to 66%. For physicians, the unexplained difference in earnings for women ranged from 52% to 57%. For lawyers, the unexplained difference in earnings for women was the smallest of the 3 professions but also exhibited the most growth, increasing from 34% in 1990 to 45% in 2010. Conclusions: The reduction in the earnings gap is driven largely by a general convergence between men and women in some, but not all, observable characteristics over time. Nevertheless, large unexplained gender gaps in earnings remain for all 3 professions. Practical Implications: Policy makers must use care in efforts to alleviate earnings differences for men and women because measures could make matters worse without a clear understanding of the nature of the factors driving the differences.

Url: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002817717300119

User Submitted?: No

Authors: Nguyen Le, Thanh-An; Lo Sasso, Anthony T; Vujicic, Marko

Periodical (Full): The Journal of the American Dental Association

Issue: 4

Volume: 148

Pages: 257-264

Data Collections: IPUMS USA

Topics: Gender, Health, Labor Force and Occupational Structure

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