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Glass Ceiling Index×Gender Gap Decomposition×
DziedzinaGender StudiesGender Studies
RodzinaProcess / pipelineRegression model
Rok powstania20011973
TwórcaDavid Cotter, Joan Hermsen, Seth Ovadia & Reeve VannemanRonald Oaxaca & Alan Blinder
TypDistributional gender-gap criterion / indexRegression-based decomposition of a mean group difference
Źródło pierwotneCotter, D. A., Hermsen, J. M., Ovadia, S., & Vanneman, R. (2001). The glass ceiling effect. Social Forces, 80(2), 655–681. DOI ↗Oaxaca, R. (1973). Male-female wage differentials in urban labor markets. International Economic Review, 14(3), 693–709. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyGlass Ceiling Measure, Glass-Ceiling Effect Index, Glass Ceiling CoefficientOaxaca-Blinder Decomposition, Blinder-Oaxaca Decomposition, Wage Gap Decomposition
Pokrewne43
PodsumowanieThe glass ceiling index and related distributional measures quantify the 'glass ceiling' — the tendency for gender disadvantage to intensify toward the top of a wage distribution or organisational hierarchy. Cotter and colleagues (2001) set out formal criteria distinguishing a true ceiling from a general gap, while labour economists operationalise it as a widening female–male gap at high quantiles of earnings, and popular indices (such as The Economist's) rank countries by women's representation in senior roles, pay, and leadership.Gender gap decomposition, most often implemented as the Oaxaca-Blinder decomposition, splits the mean difference in an outcome such as wages between men and women into a part explained by differences in measured characteristics (education, experience, occupation) and an unexplained residual part attributed to differences in how those characteristics are rewarded. Introduced independently by Ronald Oaxaca and Alan Blinder in 1973, it is the workhorse method for quantifying how much of the gender pay gap reflects composition versus differential treatment.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Glass Ceiling Index · Gender Gap Decomposition. Pobrano 2026-06-24 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare