Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Women are catching up in the high skills jobs market

The "End of Men" and Rise of Women in the High-Skilled Labor Market
by Guido Matias Cortes, Nir Jaimovich, Henry E. Siu 

Abstract:
We document a new finding regarding changes in labor market outcomes for men and women in the US.  Since 1980, conditional on being a college-educated man, the probability of working in a cognitive/high-wage occupation has fallen.  This contrasts starkly with the experience for college-educated women:  their probability of working in these occupations rose, despite a much larger increase in the supply of educated women relative to men. We consider these facts in light of a general neoclassical model of the labor market.  One key channel capable of rationalizing these findings is a greater increase in the demand for female-oriented skills in cognitive/high-wage occupations relative to other occupations. Using occupation-level data, we find evidence that this relative increase in the demand for female skills is due to an increasing importance of social skills within such occupations.  Evidence from both male and female wages is also indicative of an increase in the demand for social skills.
More at NBER.

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