Despite increased gender equality in many arenas in most of the Western world, women and men continue to choose different educational paths; this is one reason for the persistent gender segregation in the labour market. Cultural and economic explanations for occupational gender segregation both contend that gendered career choices reflect gendered preferences. By analysing data from a multifactorial survey experiment conducted in Norway, designed to isolate the preferences for occupations from preferences for job attributes with which occupation is often correlated: pay; type of position; and amount of work, this article examines whether and to what extent boys and girls who have not yet entered the labour market have different preferences for different work dimensions. The study shows some gender differences in occupational preferences, while also demonstrating similarities in boys' and girls' preferences for work dimensions, such as pay and working hours. This indicates that attributes tested by the experiment, which are typically associated with gendered occupations, cannot independently explain why boys and girls tend to have divergent occupational preferences. Importantly, however, the results suggest that boys' reluctance to undertake some female-typed occupations might be reduced if they did not pay less than male-typed occupations requiring the same level of education.
机构:
KRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
Corvinus Univ Budapest, Dept Econ, Fovam Ter 8, H-1093 Budapest, HungaryKRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
Horn, Daniel
Kiss, Hubert Janos
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
KRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
Corvinus Univ Budapest, Dept Econ, Fovam Ter 8, H-1093 Budapest, HungaryKRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
Kiss, Hubert Janos
Lenard, Tunde
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
KRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary
Stockholm Univ, SOFI, SE-10691 Stockholm, SwedenKRTK KTI, Toth Kalman U 4, H-1097 Budapest, Hungary