Do Employer Preferences Contribute to Sticky Floors?

Baert, Stijn;De Pauw, Ann-Sophie;Deschacht, Nick
(2016) Industrial and Labor Relations Review — Vol. 69, n° 3, p. 714-736 (2016)

Files

No attached file found for this publication.

Details

Authors
  • Baert, StijnUCLouvain
    Author
  • De Pauw, Ann-SophieIESEG School of Management, Lille
    Author
  • Deschacht, Nick
    Author
Abstract
The authors investigate the importance of employer preferences in explaining sticky floors, the pattern in which women are less likely, as compared to men, to start to climb the job ladder. The authors perform a randomized field experiment in the Belgian labor market and test whether hiring discrimination based on gender is heterogeneous by whether jobs imply a promotion (compared to the applicants' current position). The findings show that women receive 33% fewer interview invitations when they apply for jobs that imply a first promotion at the functional level. By contrast, the results show that their hiring chances are not significantly affected by the authority level of the job
Affiliations

Citations

Baert, S., De Pauw, A.-S., & Deschacht, N. (2016). Do Employer Preferences Contribute to Sticky Floors? Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 69(3), 714-736. https://doi.org/10.1177/0019793915625213 (Original work published 2016)