Not just a formality: Pay system formalization and sex-related earnings effects

Not just a formality: Pay system formalization and sex-related earnings effects

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Article ID: iaor20062542
Country: United States
Volume: 13
Issue: 6
Start Page Number: 601
End Page Number: 617
Publication Date: Nov 2002
Journal: Organization Science
Authors: ,
Abstract:

Drawing on neoclassical economic, internal labor market, and devaluation theories, we examine how the sex composition of jobs and the sex of individual workers affect earnings, depending upon the formalization of the pay type. Using personnel data for over 8,000 employees, we confirm the existence of a negative relationship between earnings and the proportion female in a job. We also find that for less-formalized pay types (cash incentive bonuses), sex-composition and individual-sex effects are larger than for more formalized pay (merit raises and base salary). Together, these findings support devaluation explanations, suggest that incentive bonuses may widen the earnings gap between women and men, and have implications for the design of pay structures in organizations.

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