Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia

This paper examines the occupational effects on gender earnings differentials by examining the earnings of women in each major occupational category and comparing their labor market outcomes to those of men. Using Malaysian data, the results indicate that gender earnings differentials are found to v...

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Main Author: Latifah Mohamad Nor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2000
Online Access:http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/1/1466-2751-1-SM.pdf
id ukm-1744
recordtype eprints
spelling ukm-17442016-12-14T06:30:08Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/ Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia Latifah Mohamad Nor, This paper examines the occupational effects on gender earnings differentials by examining the earnings of women in each major occupational category and comparing their labor market outcomes to those of men. Using Malaysian data, the results indicate that gender earnings differentials are found to vary within occupations, which contributes to the overall gender earnings gap in this country. The earning of men and women are found to be lower in jobs held exclusively by women in clerical occupations than the earnings of men and women employed in predominantly male occupations in sales, which suggest that occupational earnings are significantly affected by the percentage of women in an occupation. This study also reveals that the earnings gap seems to be smallest in clerical occupations, which has the highest percentage of women, and this gap is largest in occupations with the smallest percentage of women, such as in sales. Besides differences of endowment factors, discrimination also plays an important role that affects gender earnings differentials within each occupation. Except for clerical occupations, human capital variables have a smaller contribution compared to the discrimination component in explaining gender earnings differentials for each occupational category. All of these discriminatory earnings differentials were attributable to favorable male treatment rather than unfavorable female treatment Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2000-07 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/1/1466-2751-1-SM.pdf Latifah Mohamad Nor, (2000) Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia. Jurnal Pengurusan, 19 . ISSN 0127-2713 http://www.ukm.my/penerbit/jurus.htm
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution Universiti Kebangasaan Malaysia
building UKM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
language English
description This paper examines the occupational effects on gender earnings differentials by examining the earnings of women in each major occupational category and comparing their labor market outcomes to those of men. Using Malaysian data, the results indicate that gender earnings differentials are found to vary within occupations, which contributes to the overall gender earnings gap in this country. The earning of men and women are found to be lower in jobs held exclusively by women in clerical occupations than the earnings of men and women employed in predominantly male occupations in sales, which suggest that occupational earnings are significantly affected by the percentage of women in an occupation. This study also reveals that the earnings gap seems to be smallest in clerical occupations, which has the highest percentage of women, and this gap is largest in occupations with the smallest percentage of women, such as in sales. Besides differences of endowment factors, discrimination also plays an important role that affects gender earnings differentials within each occupation. Except for clerical occupations, human capital variables have a smaller contribution compared to the discrimination component in explaining gender earnings differentials for each occupational category. All of these discriminatory earnings differentials were attributable to favorable male treatment rather than unfavorable female treatment
format Article
author Latifah Mohamad Nor,
spellingShingle Latifah Mohamad Nor,
Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
author_facet Latifah Mohamad Nor,
author_sort Latifah Mohamad Nor,
title Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
title_short Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
title_full Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular Malaysia
title_sort occupational sex segregation and discrimination in peninsular malaysia
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
publishDate 2000
url http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/
http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1744/1/1466-2751-1-SM.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T19:34:13Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T19:34:13Z
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