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Título
The gender-job satisfaction paradox through time and countries
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Gender
Job satisfaction
Balanced worth vector
Paradox
Clasificación UNESCO
6306 Sociología del Trabajo
Fecha de publicación
2020
Editor
Routledge
Citación
Torregrosa, R. J., y Pita, C. (2021). The gender-job satisfaction paradox through time and countries, Applied Economics Letters, 28(12), 1000-1005, DOI: 10.1080/13504851.2020.1792402
Resumen
Much has been written about the so-called gender-job satisfaction paradox, derived from the fact
that a significant number of empirical studies found that women reported higher levels of job
satisfaction than their male counterparts, although they had what were considered ‘worse’ jobs in
terms of pay and other nonmonetary working conditions. In this article, we use a procedure to
compare the relative performance of groups when their achievements are described by distributions
of outcomes over an ordered set of categories, the Balanced Worth Vector (BWV), to analyse
whether women consistently report to be more satisfied at work than men in different periods of
time and countries. The BWV offers a cardinal, complete and transitive evaluation that is based in
the likelihood of getting better results. In our setting, the BWV methodology provides a complete
ranking of the countries covered by the European Working Conditions Survey according to the
relative levels of job satisfaction with working conditions that women and men in each country
report. Our results indicate a decreasing gender differential over time and substantial differences
across countries, proving that the gender-gap paradox cannot be considered a widespread
phenomenon.
URI
ISSN
1350-4851
DOI
10.1080/13504851.2020.1792402
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