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14.2: Introduction to Discrimination in Labor Markets

  • Page ID
    48493
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    What you’ll learn to do: analyze the economic implications of discrimination and immigration policies

    Image of group of United States government officials with one speaker at a podium. On the podium there is a sign with the text "A fair shot for everyone". Another sign to the right of the podium says "A fair shot for women to make the pay the earn". The second sign also has the images of two dollar bills and the silhouettes of a man and woman. The dollar bill next to the woman is smaller and has the text "seventy seven cents for every dollar a man makes".
    Figure 1. Policies and Wages. Much controversy surrounds government policies that would dissuade workplace discrimination.

    Discrimination occurs in a labor market when employers pay workers with the same economic characteristics, such as education, experience, and skill, are paid different amounts because of race, gender, religion, age, or disability status. In the United States, female workers on average earn less than male workers, and black workers on average earn less than white workers. There is controversy over the extent to which pay differences are caused by differences in factors like education and job experience, or by pure discrimination.

    Free markets can allow discrimination to occur, but the threat of a loss of sales or a loss of productive workers can also create incentives for a firm not to discriminate. A range of public policies can be used to reduce earnings gaps between men and women or between white and other racial/ethnic groups: requiring equal pay for equal work, and attaining more equal educational outcomes.

    In this section, we will examine these policies as well as the economic take on immigration.

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    • Modification, adaptation, and original content. Authored by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
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    14.2: Introduction to Discrimination in Labor Markets is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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