Noncognitive Skills, Occupational Attainment, and Relative Wages
Survey
HILDA
Author(s)
Date Issued
2009-07
Pages
40
Keywords
noncognitive skills
personality
gender wage gap
decomposition
occupation
Abstract
This paper examines whether men's and women's noncognitive skills influence their occupational attainment and, if so, whether this contributes to the disparity in their relative wages. We find that noncognitive skills have a substantial effect on the probability of employment in many, though not all, occupations in ways that differ by gender. Consequently, men and women with similar noncognitive skills enter occupations at very different rates. Women, however, have lower wages on average not because they work in different occupations than men do, but rather because they earn less than their male colleagues employed in the same occupation. On balance, women's noncognitive skills give them a slight wage advantage. Finally, we find that accounting for the endogeneity of occupational attainment more than halves the
proportion of the overall gender wage gap that is unexplained.
proportion of the overall gender wage gap that is unexplained.
ISBN
ISSN: 1442-8636 ISBN: 978 1 921262 93 7
Type
Reports and technical papers
