Publication | Closed Access
Is There a Glass Ceiling in Sweden?
891
Citations
19
References
2003
Year
Glass Ceiling EffectBuilding TechnologySocial SciencesSustainable DesignBuilt EnvironmentGender DisparityGender StudiesEconomic AnalysisEconomic InequalityEconomicsLabor Market CharacteristicsLabor Market OutcomeLabor EconomicsFaçadeGlass CeilingWage InflationQuantile Regression DecompositionsSociologyBusinessEconometricsGender EconomicsLabor Market ImpactUnemployment
Using 1998 data, we show that the gender log wage gap in Sweden increases throughout the wage distribution and accelerates in the upper tail. We interpret this as a strong glass ceiling effect. We use quantile regression decompositions to examine whether this pattern can be ascribed primarily to gender differences in labor market characteristics or in the rewards to those characteristics. Even after extensive controls for gender differences in age, education (both level and field), sector, industry, and occupation, we find that the glass ceiling effect we see in the raw data persists to a considerable extent.
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