Are Low-Skill Women Being Left Behind? Labor Market Evidence from the UK

Are Low-Skill Women Being Left Behind? Labor Market Evidence from the UK
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2022 Issue 042
Publication date: February 2022
ISBN: 9798400202384
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Labor , Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , Demography , Job polarization , Occupational choice , Life-cycle , Cohorts , Intergenerational inequality , cohort effect , job polarization , wage inequality , JEL classification number , labor market evidence , Wages , Women , Employment , Labor markets , Aging

Summary

Labor markets in the UK have been characterized by markedly widening wage inequality for lowskill (non-college) women, a trend that predates the pandemic. We examine the contribution of job polarization to this trend by estimating age, period, and cohort effects for the likelihood of employment in different occupations and the wages earned therein over 2001-2019. For recent generations of women, cohort effects indicate a higher likelihood of employment in low-paying manual jobs relative to high-paying abstract jobs. However, cohort effects also underpin falling wages for post-1980 cohorts across all occupations. We find that falling returns to labor rather than job polarization has been a key driver of rising inter-age wage inequality among low-skill females. Wage-level cohort effects underpin a nearly 10 percent fall in expected lifetime earnings for low-skill women born in 1990 relative to those born in 1970.