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Employer attitudes, the marginal employer, and the ethnic wage gap

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Article

Carlsson, Magnus ; Rooth, Dan-Olof

ILR Review

2016

69

1

January

227-252

discrimination ; ethnic factor ; minority group ; racial discrimination ; wage differential

EU countries

Wages and wage payment systems

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0019793915601630

English

Bibliogr.

"In most EU countries, ethnic minorities have lower wages than does the ethnic majority. To what extent these wage gaps are the result of prejudice toward ethnic minority workers is virtually unknown. The authors examine the role that prejudice plays in the creation of the ethnic wage gap in one of Europe's most egalitarian countries, Sweden. The analysis takes into account the important distinction between average employer attitudes and the attitude of the marginal employer (the attitude of the most prejudiced employer hiring the ethnic minority). Results confirm that the attitudes of the marginal employer—but not those of the average employer—are important for explaining the ethnic wage gap."

Digital



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