Authors
Inés Hardoy, Pål Schøne, Kjersti Misje Østbakken
Publication date
2017/8/1
Journal
Labour Economics
Volume
47
Pages
124-137
Publisher
North-Holland
Description
Women are typically less likely to hold management positions than men. Despite the converging roles of men and women in several labour market outcomes, the gender management gap is persistent. In this paper, we analyse the impact of children on the gender gap in management, focussing on the within-couple gap, allowing us to control for both observed and unobserved attributes of the spouse. The main findings suggest that the gender gap in management increases considerably after the arrival of the first child. Nine years after the birth of the firstborn child, the male–female gap in management has increased by approximately 5 percentage points. Heterogeneity analyses suggest that the gender gap is wider, and gets steeper over time, for couples where the father has a management education or higher education, compared to the gap for the overall sample. In households where the spouses share the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
I Hardoy, P Schøne, KM Østbakken - Labour Economics, 2017