Litcius/Paper detail

Farmworkers and the gender wage gap: An empirical analysis of wage inequality in <scp>US</scp> agriculture

Monica Fisher, Paul Lewin, Ryanne Pilgeram

2021Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract We use nationally representative data from the National Agricultural Workers Survey to assess gender‐based differences in wages and benefits of hired farmworkers. Decomposition and matching results indicate that, compared to men, women make 5% to 6% less in hourly wages and are less likely to receive a bonus or have health insurance paid by their employer. These gender gaps are partly explained by differences between female and male farmworkers in farming experience, hours worked, farm tasks, and crops cultivated. Sizable proportions of the gender gaps are unexplained and the result of discrimination, unmeasured differences between women and men, or both.

Topics & Concepts

AgricultureWageMatching (statistics)Wage inequalityEconomicsInequalityDemographic economicsGender gapSurvey data collectionLabour economicsGeographyMedicineArchaeologyMathematicsPathologyStatisticsMathematical analysisEmployment and Welfare StudiesGender, Labor, and Family DynamicsLabor market dynamics and wage inequality