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National board quotas and the gender pay gap among European managers

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Article

Maume, David J. ; Heymann, Orlaith ; Ruppanner, Leah

Work, Employment and Society

2019

33

6

December

1002-1019

gender ; supervisory board ; management ; gender equality ; women workers ; wage differential

EU countries

Social sciences

https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0950017019864509

English

Bibliogr.

" As European countries have mandated quotas for women's representation on boards, and as women have increasingly entered the ranks of management, a persistent gender gap in managerial pay remains. Drawing a sample of managers in the 2010 European Social Survey, the gender gap in pay was decomposed, finding that employer devaluation of women accounted for the majority of the gender gap in pay. This was especially true in countries without mandated quotas, but in countries that had adopted quotas for female representation on boards, results were consistent with the proposition that quotas moderated the labour market for managers (i.e. the gender gap in managerial pay was smaller as was the portion of the gap attributable to discrimination). As board quotas have increasingly been adopted across Europe, more research is needed on their ameliorative effects on gender inequality in the wider labour market."

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