Events at CERGE-EI

Monday, 12 October, 2020 | 14:00 | Applied Micro Research Seminar | ONLINE

Prof. Rafael Lalive (U Lausanne) “Can Outlawing Stated Gender Preferences Reduce Gender Segregation Across Firms?”

Prof. Rafael Lalive

The University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

Online at https://call.lifesizecloud.com/5666557

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Authors: David Card, Fabrizio Colella, Rafael Lalive

Abstract: In June 2004 the Austrian Equal Treatment Act banned the use of gender preferences in vacancy and recruiting notices. At the time over 40% of posted vacancies in the nation’s largest job board included explicit preferences for either male or female applicants. We use data on posted vacan- cies, merged to administrative records on employer workforces and on the gender of workers hired to fill vacancies, to study how the legal prohibition of gender preferences affected hiring rates of women and men and the degree of gender segregation across firms.  Consistent with recent evidence from China (Kuhn et al., 2018) we show that in the pre-2004 period employers with a stated preference were very likely (>90%) to hire a worker of that gender. We also show that most firms advertising for men had a high fraction of male employees and were seeking to fill a job in a highly-male occupation, with the opposite pattern for those advertising for women. Nevertheless, a small minority of employers appear to have been using gender preferences to recruit against stereotypes. Within  two years of the new law, stated gender preferences in Aus- trian job ads largely disappeared, and employers were posting vacancies using both female and male versions of the occupation  title. Classifying firms based on their share of female employ- ees and their industry sector, we show that the elimination of gender preferences led to a 2.0-2.5 percentage point rise in the fraction of females hired by firms that were most likely to advertise for male workers in the per-2004 period, and a 1.0-1.5 percentage point  rise in the fraction  of males hired by firms that were most likely to advertise for females. We conclude that the law had a systematic but modest effect on reducing gender segregation across firms.

JEL codes: J16, J68, J63

Keywords: Gender Preference, Workplace Gender Segregation, Anti-discriminatory Policy
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Full Text: The full text will be available later.

The seminar is supported by the European Union.