Parenthood and the Gender Gap in Pay
Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy · Uppsala University
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Abstract
We compare the income and wage trajectories of women to those of their male partners before and after parenthood. Focusing on the within-couple gap allows us to control for both observed and unobserved attributes of the spouse and to estimate both short- and long-term effects of entering parenthood. We find that 15 years after the first child has been born, the male-female gender gaps in income and wages have increased by 32 and 10 percentage points, respectively. In line with a collective labor supply model, the magnitude of these effects depends on counterfactual relative incomes or wages within the family.
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529
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- 100%
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Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Counterfactual thinking
- Economics
- Spouse
- Wage
- Labour economics
- Demographic economics
- Gender gap
- Gender pay gap
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Decent work and economic growth
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