Title: Labour market segregation between men and women
1Labour market segregationbetween men and women
- What to measure
- How to measure it
2Contents
- A definition
- Causes
- Types
- Indicators
- Data needs
3A definition
- Labour market segregation in general
- Practice of restricting particular population
group(s) to certain (economic/non-economic)
activities in order to maintain the economic
advantages and higher social status of the other
population group(s) - Types of labour market segregation
- SEX
- Race, ethnicity
- Religion
- Migrants/non-migrants
4Causes
- De jure - enforced by law
- Laws forbidding/hindering women from working or
from doing certain jobs - De facto widespread individual preferences,
social customs - Traditional female roles of family caretakers
impede/encumber that they work (in certain types
of jobs) or look for (certain types of) work, on
an equal footing as men - Subordination to men means that women are not
free to work (in certain types of jobs) or look
for (certain types of) work without approval of
husband/father/brother - Social and educational conditioning that hinder
competitiveness to allow women to work on an
equal footing as men
5Types of segregation
- In the entry to/exit from the labour market
- In the types of economic activities carried out
- In their labour inputs
- In their returns to labour
6Entry/exit
- Do they work ? Employment
- Do they look for work? Unemployment
- Do they work or look for work? Labour force
- Do they enter and exit the labour market? Labour
turnover, life cycle patterns
7Types of activities
- The type of work they do - occupations
- The type of establishment they work in -
industries - The type of contract - status in employment
- The type of employer - institutional sector
- The size of establishment where they work
- Where they work - place of work
- Hazardousness of their work occupational
injuries and disease - Their voice union density and representation
- Social security coverage
8Labour inputs
- How much do they work - hours actually
worked/usually worked, overtime,
part-time/full-time - How inconvenient are the hours they work - Night
work, shift work, weekend work - How often are they absent from work and for what
reasons family reasons, economic reasons,
social reasons
9Returns to labour
- Income from employment
- Basic wages
- Overtime payments
- Fringe benefits
- Social security benefits
- Regular and irregular payments
10Indicators
- Types of indicators
- Indicators to measure segregation in
- The entry to/exit from the labour market
- The types of economic activities carried out
- Labour inputs
- Returns to labour
11Types of indicators
- Measures of relationship
- Ratios relation between two quantities (a/b)
- Proportions, percentages quotient between one
part and the total (a/(ab)) - Index numbers
- Measures of central tendency
- Mean, median, mode
- Measures of variability
- Frequency distribution, range, standard deviation
- Shape of the distribution
- Skewness, kurtosis
12Index numbers
- Value in relation to a standard value (often
100) - When are index numbers used
- Summarize large quantities of qualitative
information - ID ½ ? Mi/M - Fi/F
- Indicate variations in time
- Wage index (Wt W(t-1))/W(t-1)
- Types
- Simple index number
- Gender pay gap Wm-Wf
- Weighted index number
- Laspeyres price index ? Pi1Qi0/ ? Pi0Qi0
13Indicators to measure entry/exit
- Activity rate
- Gross Labour force/total population 100
- Net Labour force/working age population 100
- Employment rate
- Employed persons/working age population 100
- Unemployment rate
- Unemployed persons/Labour force 100
14Indicators to measure activities carried out
- Share of women in category i
- Women in category i/total workers in category i
100 - Fi/Ni 100
- Percentage of all women in category I
- Women in category i/all women 100
- Fi/F 100
- Sex ratio (in category i)
- Women in category i/Men in category i 100
- Wi/Mi 100
- Dissimilarity index (ID)
- ID ½ ? Mi/M - Fi/F
15Indicators to measure labour inputs
- Distribution of workers by hours worked per week
- Percentage women/men who work less/more than x
hours per week - Distribution of workers by working time
arrangements
16Indicators to measure returns to labour
- Gender wage gap
- (Wm Wf)/Wm 100
- Gender wage gap corrected for differences in
occupations/industries - 1/N ?Ni (Wmi - Wfi)/Wmi
- Average wage
- 1/N ? Wi
- Median wage - wage below and above which half of
the population is found - Distribution of workers by categories of income
earned
17Data needs
- Complete worker coverage
- Sufficient detail
- Explanatory variables
18Complete worker coverage
- Coverage because of the SNA-93 definition of work
- Coverage in labour statistics concepts
- Coverage because of use of short or long
reference periods - Seasonal/casual activities
19Definition of work, SNA-93
Productive activities
Activities that produce services for the market
or that are carried out for payment
Activities that produce unpaid services for the
consumption of own/another household
Activities that produce goods (for the market or
for free)
Economic activities
Non-economic activities
20Treatment of non-market activities, SNA-93
Included (if the amount of that good is quantitatively important in relation to the total supply of that good in a country) Included (if the amount of that good is quantitatively important in relation to the total supply of that good in a country) Included (if the amount of that good is quantitatively important in relation to the total supply of that good in a country) Excluded
Growing or gathering field crops, fruits and vegetables Producing eggs, milk and food Hunting animals and birds Catching fish, crabs and shellfish Cutting firewood and building poles Collecting thatching and weaving materials Burning charcoal Mining slat Cutting peat Carrying water Threshing and milling grain Making butter, ghee and cheese Slaughtering livestock Curing hides and skins Preserving meat and fish Making beer, wine and spirits Crushing oil seeds Weaving baskets and mats Making clay pots and plates Weaving textiles Making furniture Dressmaking and tailoring Handicrafts made from non-primary products Constructing dwellings Constructing farm buildings Building boats and canoes Clearing land for cultivation Cleaning, decorating and maintaining dwelling, including small repair Cleaning, repairing household durables, vehicles or other goods Preparing and serving meals Caring for, training and instructing children Caring for the sick, invalid or old people Transporting household members or their goods
Source Based on System of National Accounts,
1993.
21Coverage in concepts
- Employment
- Unemployment
- Informal sector
- Income
- Industrial disputes
22Coverage in employment
- Persons at work for at least one hour
- Persons who work a few hours and whose social
role is to be a housewife, student or retired - The self employed
- Unpaid family workers
- Armed forces
- Unpaid workers
- Persons not at work
- Extended absences
23Coverage in unemployment
- Actively seeking work
- Willingness to wrok
- Being available to work
- Any work
- Only at home
24Coverage in informal sector
- Sectors often excluded
- Agriculture
- Domestic work
- Outwork/homework
- Work for the benefit of own household
- Main and secondary jobs
- Workers without fixed work location
25Coverage in income
- Components of income
- Basic wages
- Bonuses
- Payments in kind and services
- Social security benefits
- Family-related payments
26Coverage in industrial disputes
- Legal or official disputes
- Minimum duration of disputes
- Workers directly and indirectly involved
27Sufficient detail
- The more detail, the clearer it is to see gender
differences - Examples
- Sample size may not always allow the detail
required - In household surveys
- In establishment surveys
28Examples of sufficient detail
- Occupations
- Professionals by type doctors vs nurses,
physicists vs teachers - Managers in small vs large firms
- Craftworkers in mining vs clothes manufacturing
- Status in employment
- Regular vs. casual employees
- Subsistence workers and homeworkers vs employers
- Income
- Basic pay vs overtime pay, bonuses and social
security contributions - Hours of work
- Normal hours vs overtime and absence from work
29Explanatory variables
- All these indicators should be calculated not
only by sex, but by - Levels of education
- Age groups
- Family context
- Marital status
- Presence and number of preschool children
- Presence of elderly persons requiring care
- Therefore, statistics should be readily
disaggregated by these variables
30stat/ilo.org
- www.ilo.org/stat
- http//laborsta.ilo.org