Scientific journal paper Q1
The determinants of gender pay gap in Portuguese private firms
Carlos Duarte (Duarte, C.); José Esperança (Esperança, J.); José Curto (Curto, J. D.); Maria-Conceição Santos (Santos, M-C.); M. Carapeto (Carapeto, M.);
Journal Title
Gender in Management: An International Journal
Year (definitive publication)
2010
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
More Information
Web of Science®

Times Cited: 5

(Last checked: 2024-11-21 12:19)

View record in Web of Science®


: 0.4
Scopus

Times Cited: 3

(Last checked: 2024-11-15 17:49)

View record in Scopus


: 0.1
Google Scholar

Times Cited: 13

(Last checked: 2024-11-17 12:43)

View record in Google Scholar

Abstract
Purpose: The paper aims to investigate the existence of gender segregation and to analyse the determinants of gender income disparity in Portuguese private firms. Design/methodology/approach: The main research instrument is a qualitative and quantitative questionnaire with 3,906 individuals from 75 Portuguese private firms. This paper uses separate multivariate ordered tobit models for men and women. Findings: It is found that job segregation is one of the major sources of gender inequality in the labour market but does not contribute for a considerable gender pay gap. In fact only scant and nuanced evidence of a negative gap of 2.2 percent against women is found. However, no support for the contention that women are systematically underpaid if they work in occupations where females are predominant is found. When it comes to variable pay, differences between men and women are less significant than with base pay. Practical implications: The paper reveals that the under-representation of women in high-paying jobs and their over-representation in low-paying clerical and service occupations are key in explaining the existence of a glass ceiling. Despite that it appears wage disparity does exist, and that it will probably continue to exist, the results point towards a window of opportunity for women. Originality/value: The paper shows that with a higher contribution of men in household and childcare activities, women will have more time and opportunity for lobbying activities, which will increase their opportunities for higher career
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
Equal pay; Gender; Human resource management; Portugal; Private sector organizations
  • Economics and Business - Social Sciences
  • Sociology - Social Sciences