Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China

This paper studies the returns to general labour market experience and firm-specific tenure, using data from China. Specifically, it focuses on explaining the gender wage difference from the perspective of general human capital and specific human capital. It applies the Heckman maximum likelihood es...

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Main Authors: Dan Qu, Saisai Guo, Lafang Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:Ekonomska Istraživanja
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1331677X.2019.1592695
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spelling doaj-86805e9e47454ff5943272ed1ff890c32020-11-25T02:30:46ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEkonomska Istraživanja1331-677X1848-96642019-01-013211169118410.1080/1331677X.2019.15926951592695Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from ChinaDan Qu0Saisai Guo1Lafang Wang2Hunan UniversityBeijing Normal UniversityHunan UniversityThis paper studies the returns to general labour market experience and firm-specific tenure, using data from China. Specifically, it focuses on explaining the gender wage difference from the perspective of general human capital and specific human capital. It applies the Heckman maximum likelihood estimator and Topel two-step estimation methodology to correct sample selection bias and individual heterogeneity. After correcting the errors, the authors find that returns to experience are higher for men than women, especially for married men and women. Furthermore, the return to tenure is higher than that to general experience. For men, the former is about 6% higher than the latter. But for women, tenure contributes 7–8% more to the wage growth than experience. The return of general experience mainly contributes to gender wage difference in China. Empirical results also show that the cross section analysis downward biases the returns to potential experience and a simple Topel-2S estimation in the panel study upward biases the returns.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1331677X.2019.1592695return to experiencereturn to tenuregender wage difference
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dan Qu
Saisai Guo
Lafang Wang
spellingShingle Dan Qu
Saisai Guo
Lafang Wang
Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
Ekonomska Istraživanja
return to experience
return to tenure
gender wage difference
author_facet Dan Qu
Saisai Guo
Lafang Wang
author_sort Dan Qu
title Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
title_short Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
title_full Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
title_fullStr Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
title_full_unstemmed Experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from China
title_sort experience, tenure and gender wage difference: evidence from china
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Ekonomska Istraživanja
issn 1331-677X
1848-9664
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This paper studies the returns to general labour market experience and firm-specific tenure, using data from China. Specifically, it focuses on explaining the gender wage difference from the perspective of general human capital and specific human capital. It applies the Heckman maximum likelihood estimator and Topel two-step estimation methodology to correct sample selection bias and individual heterogeneity. After correcting the errors, the authors find that returns to experience are higher for men than women, especially for married men and women. Furthermore, the return to tenure is higher than that to general experience. For men, the former is about 6% higher than the latter. But for women, tenure contributes 7–8% more to the wage growth than experience. The return of general experience mainly contributes to gender wage difference in China. Empirical results also show that the cross section analysis downward biases the returns to potential experience and a simple Topel-2S estimation in the panel study upward biases the returns.
topic return to experience
return to tenure
gender wage difference
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1331677X.2019.1592695
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