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Wages, Sorting on Skill, and the Racial Composition of Jobs

Barry T. Hirsch1; David A. Macpherson2

1 Trinity University · 2 Florida State University

Journal of Labor Economics 2004

Wages for black and white workers are substantially lower in occupations with a high density of black employees, following standard controls. Such correlations can exist absent discrimination or as a result of discrimination. In wage level equations, partial correlations fall sharply after controlling for occupational skills. Longitudinal estimates accounting for worker heterogeneity indicate little wage change associated with changes in racial composition. Results support a “quality sorting” rather than discrimination explanation, with racial density serving as an index of unmeasured skills. Discrimination reflected in racial wage gaps occurs within occupations or across occupations in a manner uncorrelated with racial composition.

DOI
10.1086/380407
Volume
22 (1)
Pages
189-210
Language
en
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