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The gender pay gap in the Visegrad Groups

Jakub Harman (Faculty of National Economy, University of Economics in Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia)
Lucia Bartůsková (Department of Economic and Social Policy, Prague University of Economics and Business, Prague, Czech Republic)

Journal of Economic Studies

ISSN: 0144-3585

Article publication date: 13 September 2023

102

Abstract

Purpose

The gender pay gap is a well-documented phenomenon in labor economics. Based on the 2018 Structure of Earnings Survey (SES), the authors estimate the impact of observable characteristics on the gender pay gap in Visegrad Group countries and provide policy recommendations on reducing the gender pay gap.

Design/methodology/approach

The Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition is applied to estimate the values of explained and unexplained parts of the gender pay gap. Gender pay gap in unadjusted as well as adjusted form is estimated using data on the individual level.

Findings

The results show that unadjusted gender pay gap proved to be stable at more than 20%. The authors found evidence that education widens gender pay gap implying that men have higher returns on education than women. Tertiary education proved to be the highest contributor to widening of gender pay gap. Results also show that there is strong sectoral and occupational segregation. Decomposition proved that only 21% of gender pay gap could be explained by observed characteristics. The unexplained part showed negative values, meaning women would have higher wages, if they had characteristics like men.

Research limitations/implications

Structure of Earnings Survey data are published every four years; therefore the authors’ dataset from year 2018 might not completely reflect today's reality. Unfortunately, newer data are note available yet. Second, Structure of Earning Survey data do not contain variables representing social factors of respondents like marital status, number of children or labour market absence due to birth or childcare. Third, data used for this study do not contain firms that have less than 10 employees; therefore, considerable portion of the labour market is omitted.

Originality/value

Results of this study will help policymakers understand the roots and causes of the gender pay gap in Visegrad Group countries but addressing this issue requires further research.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The contribution is the result of the solution of the research project VEGA no. 1/0037/20 “New challenges and solutions for employment growth in changing socio-economic conditions” and Erasmus + Traineeship.

Citation

Harman, J. and Bartůsková, L. (2023), "The gender pay gap in the Visegrad Groups", Journal of Economic Studies, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JES-02-2023-0072

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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