Abstract
Annual changes in the US gender gap are analysed before, during and after the Great Recession using a quasi-experimental approach, with treatment and comparison groups based on the industry composition within states. During this recession, the hourly wage gap was differentially reduced by seven to ten percentage points in states with a higher concentration of employment in male-dominant and cyclical industries, whereas the employment gap was differentially reduced by five to seven percentage points. Neither outcome was significantly altered in the years immediately before or after the recession. The evidence supports the pro-cyclicality of the gender gap movements.
Notes
1 Park and Shin (Citation2005) show similar pro-cyclical relationships using occupations.
2 For more detail, see Shin (Citation1999).
3 The particular data used are from the IPUMS-CPS Version 3.0.
4 The utilities industry, while also male-dominant (73.60%), was excluded due to it being a noncyclical industry.
5 The REA data do not contain any gender information.
6 Each survey year of the CPS provides responses regarding the previous year.
7 Estimates in this article are in log point changes and are approximated as percentage changes.