Tallinn University of Technology

You are welcome to the Department of Economics and Finance research seminar "What determines the gender pay gap in academia?".

The seminar will take place on the 9th of October, from 14:00 to 15:00 in room SOC-413 and MS Teams platform (link).

Presenter: Jaan Masso (University of Tartu)

Paper title: What determines the gender pay gap in academia?
Authors: Jaan Masso - University of Tartu, Jaanika Meriküll - Bank of Estonia, University of Tartu, Liis Roosaar - University of Tartu, Kärt Rõigas - University of Tartu, Tiiu Paas - University of Tartu

Abstract:

This paper focuses on two mechanisms that could explain the persistence of the gender pay gap – child penalty and bargaining. We concentrate on academia and use administrative data from the University of Tartu, the largest university in Estonia. The context of the academic sector allows us to control for worker productivity through indicators of research and teaching activities. Administrative data on academic staff from 2012 to 2021 has been linked with the population register and web-scraped data from SCOPUS. We follow the quasi-experimental approach proposed by Kleven et al. (2019a) to identify child penalty and derive outside option wages for all the detailed institutes to estimate the role of bargaining. Despite no penalty in hourly wages, the decrease in the working hours for mothers equals two years of full-time work spread over four years after childbirth. Compared to the penalty for the whole population, the child penalty in academia is shorter-lived, and no statistically significant effect on women's publications or citations was found. Men, in contrast, do not experience any penalties related to children. Women's worse bargaining skills seem to be an important factor behind the gender pay gap in academia, whereas the institute's higher outside option wage is related to relatively higher wages for men and is a less important factor for the wages of women.

The public research seminars of the Department of Economics and Finance (DEF) at Tallinn University of Technology  usually take place on the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month both in online  and onsite format, unless announced otherwise. The seminar will last one hour, presentation will last approximately 45 minutes followed by 15 minutes of discussion. The seminars are held in English. Questions about the seminar can be sent to the seminar coordinator Natalia Levenko: natalia.levenko@taltech.ee.