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Working for Position: Women, Men, and Managerial Work Hours
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0
References
1998
Year
Job HoursHuman Resource ManagementWorkplace StudyOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesFlexible Work ArrangementHours PreferencesSurvey DataGender StudiesManagementManagerial Work HoursLabor Market OutcomeFeminist TheoryChanging WorkforceInternal Labor MarketWorkforce DevelopmentSociologyBusinessGender DivideUnemployment
Job hours may be determined in part by positional striving to keep up with or outwork others in one's organization. A prisoner's dilemma in which employees have an incentive to work more than a socially optimal level of hours may arise from positional competition. This article uses survey data to estimate how much positional striving increases job hours, and considers how it may contribute to workplaces more in accord with men's than women's hours preferences.