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Gender and the effect of working hours on firm-sponsored training

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Picchio, Matteo ; van Ours, Jan C.

Institute of Labor Economics, Bonn

IZA - Bonn

2015

36 p.

enterprise level ; gender ; part time employment ; training ; working time

Netherlands

Discussion Paper

9470

Working time and leave

http://www.iza.org/

English

Bibliogr.

"Using employees' longitudinal data, we study the effect of working hours on the propensity of firms to sponsor training of their employees. We show that, whereas male part-time workers are less likely to receive training than male full-timers, part-time working women are as likely to receive training as full-time working women. Although we cannot rule out gender-working time specific monopsony power, we speculate that the gender-specific effect of working hours on training has to do with gender-specific stereotyping. In the Netherlands, for women it is common to work part-time. More than half of the prime age female employees work part-time. Therefore, because of social norms, men working part-time could send a different signal to their employer than women working part-time. This might generate a different propensity of firms to sponsor training of male part-timers than female part-timers."

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