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Gender Wage Gap, Wage-Productivity Decoupling, and the Rate of Profit

By: Material type: Continuing resourceContinuing resourcePublication details: Review of Radical Political Economics; 2024Description: 51-69ISSN:
  • 0486-6134
Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: The declining gender wage gap (GWG) and the wage-productivity decoupling (WPD) are two emerging phenomena for the United States since the 1980s. This article proposes an extension to the usual decomposition method of the profit rate to account for both the GWG and the WPD on aggregate income distribution. It then uses this framework to study the US manufacturing sector from 1960 to 2017. It suggests that gender wage inequality was a source of profitability, especially before 1986, but which was slowly petered out. Since 2001, increases in the profit share have mostly been due to the WPD. These results highlight the relevance of gender-based inequality in the more traditional analysis of the profit rate dynamics.JEL Classification: B51, E11, E25, J16
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Article Index Article Index Dr VKRV Rao Library Vol. 56, No. 1 Not for loan AI167

The declining gender wage gap (GWG) and the wage-productivity decoupling (WPD) are two emerging phenomena for the United States since the 1980s. This article proposes an extension to the usual decomposition method of the profit rate to account for both the GWG and the WPD on aggregate income distribution. It then uses this framework to study the US manufacturing sector from 1960 to 2017. It suggests that gender wage inequality was a source of profitability, especially before 1986, but which was slowly petered out. Since 2001, increases in the profit share have mostly been due to the WPD. These results highlight the relevance of gender-based inequality in the more traditional analysis of the profit rate dynamics.JEL Classification: B51, E11, E25, J16

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