Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?

Differences in earnings between male and female workers persist in developed and developing countries despite a narrowing of gender gaps in educational attainment over the past half-century. This paper examines the gender wage gap in Vietnam and sh...

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Main Authors: Chowdhury, Iffat, Johnson, Hillary C., Mannava, Aneesh, Perova, Elizaveta
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717051525869722243/Gender-gap-in-earnings-in-Vietnam-why-do-Vietnamese-women-work-in-lower-paid-occupations
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29839
id okr-10986-29839
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-298392021-06-08T14:42:46Z Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations? Chowdhury, Iffat Johnson, Hillary C. Mannava, Aneesh Perova, Elizaveta GENDER WAGE GAP GENDER STREAMING OCCUPATIONAL SORTING EARNINGS GAP NON-WAGE COMPENSATION GENDER ROLES Differences in earnings between male and female workers persist in developed and developing countries despite a narrowing of gender gaps in educational attainment over the past half-century. This paper examines the gender wage gap in Vietnam and shows that a nontrivial part of the gap is associated with occupational sorting. The paper considers three explanations for why occupational sorting emerges. First, it explores whether women sort into occupations with better nonmonetary characteristics, such as paid leave and shorter hours. The data from Labor Force Surveys support this hypothesis. Second, it checks if occupational sorting among the adult labor force is driven by social norms about gender roles learned and internalized at an early age. To do so, the paper checks for evidence of sorting in the aspirations of 12-year-old children. Specifically, the analysis simulates what the gender wage gap would be if boys and girls pursued the occupations they aspired to at age 12, and the distribution of salaries remained unchanged. The paper does not find support for the hypothesis that gender norms drive occupational sorting by inducing aspirational sorting at an early age. Finally, for individuals with higher education, the paper checks if occupational sorting occurs during the school-to-work transition, when women face higher barriers in finding a job in their field of study. The analysis does not find evidence to support this last hypothesis. Overall, the findings suggest that in Vietnam gender-specific preferences for nonmonetary job characteristics play a key role in the emergence of occupational sorting. 2018-05-16T19:46:32Z 2018-05-16T19:46:32Z 2018-05 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717051525869722243/Gender-gap-in-earnings-in-Vietnam-why-do-Vietnamese-women-work-in-lower-paid-occupations http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29839 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8433 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Vietnam
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic GENDER WAGE GAP
GENDER STREAMING
OCCUPATIONAL SORTING
EARNINGS GAP
NON-WAGE COMPENSATION
GENDER ROLES
spellingShingle GENDER WAGE GAP
GENDER STREAMING
OCCUPATIONAL SORTING
EARNINGS GAP
NON-WAGE COMPENSATION
GENDER ROLES
Chowdhury, Iffat
Johnson, Hillary C.
Mannava, Aneesh
Perova, Elizaveta
Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Vietnam
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8433
description Differences in earnings between male and female workers persist in developed and developing countries despite a narrowing of gender gaps in educational attainment over the past half-century. This paper examines the gender wage gap in Vietnam and shows that a nontrivial part of the gap is associated with occupational sorting. The paper considers three explanations for why occupational sorting emerges. First, it explores whether women sort into occupations with better nonmonetary characteristics, such as paid leave and shorter hours. The data from Labor Force Surveys support this hypothesis. Second, it checks if occupational sorting among the adult labor force is driven by social norms about gender roles learned and internalized at an early age. To do so, the paper checks for evidence of sorting in the aspirations of 12-year-old children. Specifically, the analysis simulates what the gender wage gap would be if boys and girls pursued the occupations they aspired to at age 12, and the distribution of salaries remained unchanged. The paper does not find support for the hypothesis that gender norms drive occupational sorting by inducing aspirational sorting at an early age. Finally, for individuals with higher education, the paper checks if occupational sorting occurs during the school-to-work transition, when women face higher barriers in finding a job in their field of study. The analysis does not find evidence to support this last hypothesis. Overall, the findings suggest that in Vietnam gender-specific preferences for nonmonetary job characteristics play a key role in the emergence of occupational sorting.
format Working Paper
author Chowdhury, Iffat
Johnson, Hillary C.
Mannava, Aneesh
Perova, Elizaveta
author_facet Chowdhury, Iffat
Johnson, Hillary C.
Mannava, Aneesh
Perova, Elizaveta
author_sort Chowdhury, Iffat
title Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
title_short Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
title_full Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
title_fullStr Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
title_full_unstemmed Gender Gap in Earnings in Vietnam : Why Do Vietnamese Women Work in Lower Paid Occupations?
title_sort gender gap in earnings in vietnam : why do vietnamese women work in lower paid occupations?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/717051525869722243/Gender-gap-in-earnings-in-Vietnam-why-do-Vietnamese-women-work-in-lower-paid-occupations
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29839
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