Chapter 9 Discrimination Discrimination: one source of earnings differences by race and sex. See Figure 9.1: compares earnings for FT YR workers over time.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 8: Women’s Earnings, Occupations, and the Labor Market Year 2002: –FT employed females earned 77.5% of FT employed males. –Female wage growth more.
Advertisements

Labor & Wages Chapter 9 Section 2
The EEOC and Trends for Working Women: Current and Emerging Issues 2007 National Equal Opportunity Professional Development Forum Edana E. Lewis, Esq.
CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET Chapter objectives:  Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race.
CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET Chapter objectives:  Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race.
Unit 4 Microeconomics: Business and Labor
Chapter 9 Section 2.
CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET Chapter objectives:  Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race.
Copyright©2004 South-Western 19 Earnings and Discrimination.
Chapter 18-1 Chapter 18 BUSINESS & SOCIETY Ethics and Stakeholder Management Carroll & Buchholtz 6e Business and Society: Ethics and Stakeholder Management,
Chapter 2 Legal Compliance. The Employment Relationship Employer-employee Independent Contractor Temporary Employee.
Chapter 7: Causes of Earnings Differences Year 2002: –FT employed females earned 77.5% of FT employed males. –Female wage growth more than twice inflation;
Earnings and Discrimination Chapter 19 Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. Earnings and Discrimination Differences in Earnings in the United States Today –The typical physician earns about $200,000.
Principles and Development of Employment Discrimination Law in the U.S. Professor Glenn George University of North Carolina School of Law Visiting Professor,
Chapter 16 – Labor Markets
Managing a Diverse Workforce
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 Chapter 9 Discrimination in Employment This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Employment Discrimination. ©SHRM Disparate Treatment Disparate treatment is discrimination that occurs when an employer treats some employees less.
Pay Discrimination © Nancy Brown Johnson, Fairness and Monkeys Monkeys and Fairness.
Chapter 10 Labor Market Discrimination Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Labor Economics, 4 th edition.
Chapter 18-1 Chapter 18 BUSINESS & SOCIETY Ethics and Stakeholder Management Carroll & Buchholtz 6e Business and Society: Ethics and Stakeholder Management,
Prepared by: Anh Nguyen. Diversity in workplace has increased significantly recently.
Economics of Gender Chapter 9 Assist.Prof.Dr.Meltem INCE YENILMEZ.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Labor Markets.
34 people killed in the riot 1,000 injured 107,000 participants 16,000 police and National Guardsmen intervene Race Riot in Watts, California, 1965 Martin.
Legal Compliance I MANA 4328 Dennis C. Veit
Employee Rights and Discrimination Chapter 12. Copyright © 2007 Thomson Delmar Learning Objectives Identify major employment discrimination laws impacting.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 40 Equal Employment Opportunity Law Twomey Jennings Anderson’s.
Facts about the American Education System. Quick Facts College Enrollment Total 17.5 million 7.5 million males 9.9 millionfemales.
Overview Of United States Labor Laws Heller Ehrman LLP James R. Hays.
Is the process of being fair to women and men. To ensure fairness, measures must often be available to compensate for historical and social disadvantages.
Slide 1Lesson 18: Understanding and Preventing Sexual and Racial Discrimination Understanding and Preventing Sexual and Racial Discrimination.
Minorities and Criminal Justice. What do you think the person wearing this badge does?
The Sixties Political, Economic and Social Issues.
Comprehensive Volume, 18 th Edition Chapter 42: Equal Employment Opportunity Law.
Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. © 2000 Chapter 12 Gender, Race, and Ethnicity in the Labor Market.
Ch. 11: Employment and Earnings Policy Topics already covered: –1) verified existence of sex differences; –2) presented HK explanations; –3) discrimination.
Introduction to Economics: Social Issues and Economic Thinking Wendy A. Stock PowerPoint Prepared by Z. Pan CHAPTER 19 THE ECONOMICS OF LABOR MARKET DISCRIMINATION.
>>> Illegal for employers to engage in employment discrimination (e.g., hiring, firing, promotion, pay, job classifications) because of: Race, color, religion,
Wage Discrimination: MBAs Powell chapter in Moe book. Reviews theories of discrimination arising from prejudice: –employers –fellow employees –customers.
Chapter 19 Equal Opportunity in Employment. Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall.19-2 Title VII of the Civil Rights Act.
Racial and Ethnic Inequality. Learning Objectives Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology,
Discrimination in Employment Chapter 23. Employment Discrimination Treating individuals differently based on differences Treating individuals differently.
CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET Chapter objectives:  Document levels and trends in earnings differentials by gender and race.
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT notes. Equal Employment Title VII Pregnancy Discrimination Act FMLAADAADEAEqual Pay Act.
The Affirmative Action Debate Pro Debaters: Audra Tindall Tiana Newsome Tiana Newsome Con Debaters: Aylin Atabek Elissa Vaidman.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2002 All Rights Reserved. McGraw-Hill/ Irwin 18-1 Business and Society POST, LAWRENCE, WEBER Managing a Diverse Workforce.
29.1 b a c kn e x t h o m e Chapter 29 Objectives List the bases in federal law upon which an employer may not discriminate against employees. Explain.
Copyright © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved The Legal Environment of HRM National Labor Relations Act and Labor-Management Relations Act (1935) –Establishes.
Sources of discrimination Equilibrium in a perfectly competitive labor market has no discrimination Wages equal marginal revenue products Everyone who.
Slide 1 1.What are the most common discrimination charges filed with the EEOC? The least common? Source: The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Chapter 41 Equal Employment Opportunity Law Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
1 Sex and Race Discrimination Chapter You Are Here.
19 Earnings and Discrimination. Differences in Earnings in the United States Today – The typical physician earns about $200,000 a year. – The typical.
Discrimination and Americans with Disabilities. AGE Discrimination The Age Discrimination Act of 1975 prohibits discrimination on the basis of age in.
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST HISPANICS IN THE WORKPLACE BY Karla Arango.
Feminist/Women’s Movement 1960s-present. While you watch Makers, you will be taking notes on the following topics: 1.Women as Homemakers in 50s 2.Feminine.
Discrimination In Employment
UNLAWFUL EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES
Earnings and Discrimination
Earnings and Discrimination
CH. 12: GENDER, RACE, AND ETHNICITY IN THE LABOR MARKET
Chapter 16 – Labor Markets
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Chapter 40 EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY LAW
Earnings and Discrimination
Wage Gap against Women Kayla Kaluzniak.
Facts about the American Education System
Employment Discrimination
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Discrimination Discrimination: one source of earnings differences by race and sex. See Figure 9.1: compares earnings for FT YR workers over time. –AA vs Whites: 1940 to 2000: –Men vs Women: 1940 to 2000

Two Types of Discrimination 1) Pre-market discrimination: 2) Market discrimination: Sources of mkt discrimination: –Personal prejudice: –Market power: –Statistical discrimination:

More on Discrimination D. and Lifecycle earnings: any small discrimination at start of career (education, hiring, OJT) can result in very large wage differences later in life. Glass Ceiling: See Table 9.3.

More on D Reverse discrimination: when majority group is discriminated against to “make up for” past discrimination. Results from explicit quotas or fear of lawsuit from minority. In reality: very little takes place but when it does, makes big news (like “man bites dog”).

Measuring Discrimination Most common: residual method: try to explain as much of difference as can with factors that should affect differences (like education, occupation, OJT, intermittent work, etc.). See Table 9.4. Part left unexplained is attributed to discrimination. Audit Studies (Matched Pairs; Not in textbook). Strongly suggestive of persistent discrimination.

Economic Progress of African Americans AA: See Table 9.5: shows improvement (  ) in earnings gap, education gap, %poverty; occupational disparities. Worrisome Trends: little improvement in last two decades; more than doubling of families with/female head; persistent gaps in empl gaps. Growing group of “have-nots”

Economic Progress for Women Clear improvement in FT earnings gap, less occupational segregation, entering wages for college grads very similar, more work experience. Concerns: persistent gap for mothers versus non-mothers. Mommy Track: Comparable Worth:

Anti-Discrimination Legislation Civil Rights Act of 1964—Title VII makes it unlawful: “to refuse to hire or to discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to his compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges or employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.” Series of updates. Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA). Americans with Disabilities Act: (ADA, 1992)