• Title/Summary/Keyword: 임금결정

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The Long-term Trend and Decomposition of Gender Wage Gap (성별 임금격차의 장기 추세와 요인분해분석)

  • Jang, Kwangnam
    • Journal of Labour Economics
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    • v.43 no.2
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    • pp.75-107
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    • 2020
  • Using the data from 1980 to 2017, I show the long-term trends in the gender wage gap in Korea and analyze factors using decomposition method. It tended to decline until the 1990s, but gradually slowed after the 2000s. Gelbach(2016)'s decomposition method is used as an alternative rather than Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition. The results show that the proportion of explanation of traditional factors, such as age, education, firm size, industry and occupation, are continuously decreasing in explaining the gender wage gap. Expecially, the proportion of explanation of age and that of education have decreased, and that of industry tended to decrease in the 1990s but to increase after the 2000s.

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Gender Wage Differentials in the Arts and Cultural Sector (문화예술분야에서 성별임금격차 분석연구)

  • Heo, Shik;Sa, Myung-Cheol
    • Journal of the Korea Academia-Industrial cooperation Society
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    • v.11 no.11
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    • pp.4151-4160
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    • 2010
  • Recently the arts and cultural sector is drawing attention as a new growth engine of the Korean economy. The paper is empirically analyzed on the gender wage differentials in the arts and cultural sector and specially focused on decomposing the wage differentials between the manufacturing sector and the arts and cultural sector. Our results may be partly useful for explaining the existing phenomenon of the arts and cultural sector in Korean labor markets, for example, young, highly educated, part-time contracts, less gender discrimination, etc. The results might provide somehow the policy directions of reducing the gender wage differentials.

University Hierarchy and Labor Market Outcome - Wage Differentials between Provincial and Seoul Metropolitan Area University Graduates - (대학서열과 노동시장 성과 - 지방대생 임금차별을 중심으로 -)

  • Oh, Hoyoung
    • Journal of Labour Economics
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.87-118
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    • 2007
  • Using KRIVET's Graduates Economic Activities Survey for 2005, this article examines the relationship between university ranking and labor market outcome, with a focus on wage differentials existing between provincial and Seoul metropolitan area university graduates. According to the analysis results, the average monthly wage for provincial university graduates was 1,747.7 thousand Korean won, which is 11.5% lower than that for graduates of universities in the Seoul metropolitan area. School effects on individual wage were estimated to about 12.2% after applying Hierarchical Linear Model technique, which means that university explains only an insignificant part of the total variance in wage among graduates. After controlling for the selection bias, the ability difference between the two areas, by applying the Heckman type 2SLS wage function and Neumark wage differential decomposition technique, the wage gap resulting from the segregation was not identified. This implies that, to a significant extent, the wage gap between provincial and Seoul metropolitan university graduates is attributed to the difference in productivity among individual graduates, rather than to the wage segregation. Also, the estimated wage function by applying Quantile Regression technique indicates that there does not exist any significant wage segregation difference by wage quantile.

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Damaging effects and problems of recent labor law issues on the industrial workforce (최근 노동관계법 이슈가 산업인력에 미치는 영향과 과제)

  • Lee, Sang-hee
    • Journal of Engineering Education Research
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.20-30
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    • 2015
  • The recent increase of wages is considered to be the result of lawsuits on ordinary wage expansion and the reduction of working hours. This may enlarge the wage gap between enterprise and small business, and thus worsen the insufficient supply of workforce to small businesses. Therefore, it is necessary to provide strategies to control the increase of wages in order to resolve the difficulty in the industrial workforce supply and to enforce the industrial competitiveness.

Effects of Minimum Wage Increases on the Volume of Waged Employment: Evidence from the Economically Active Population Survey (최저임금 인상이 근로자 고용규모에 미치는 영향: "경제활동인구조사" 자료를 이용한 분석)

  • Kang, Changhui
    • Journal of Labour Economics
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    • v.44 no.1
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    • pp.73-101
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    • 2021
  • Employing bunching estimators of Cengiz et al. (2019) for data from the "Economically Active Population Survey," this paper estimates the effect of minimum wage increases on the volume of waged employment for the period 2009-2019. A bunching estimator, which exploits yearly changes in the hourly wage distribution due to the minimum wage hike, can be easily applied to the Korean labor market, which adopts the yearly single national minimum wage. The estimation results suggest that an increase in the annual minimum wage during the period from 2009 to 2019 had a negative effect on the volume of waged employment. A 10% increase in the (real) minimum wage leads to a 1.42~1.74% decrease in the volume of waged employment. Disemployment effects of minimum wage hikes are greater in the sector with a higher proportion of minimum wage workers. It is necessary to carefully consider disemployment effects in determining the level of the minimum wage.

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Research Performance, School Characteristics, and Wage Differentials among College Professors in Korea (교수의 연구 성과 및 학교 특성과 보수격차)

  • Ryoo, Jeawoo;Kim, Me Rahn
    • Journal of Labour Economics
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.1-24
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    • 2012
  • This paper analyzes the wage structure of college professors in private institutions in Korea. An analysis of earning functions reveals that the human capital of the professors is of more general type rather than firm-specific one. It is also found that the wage differential among colleges is far greater than that within colleges. Finally, the influence of research output or the fields of study on wage is found to be small. This shows that compensation for professors is set largely independent of individual performance or labor market conditions for professors.

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The Determinants of Wage Premium (임금(賃金)프리미엄의 결정요인(決定要因))

  • Rhee, Chong-hoon
    • KDI Journal of Economic Policy
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.79-106
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    • 1992
  • This study analyzes the determinants of wage premium, defined as the excess of actual wage rate over opportunity wage, for the average worker in a Korean bargaining unit. Average wage premium of a firm is decomposed into quasi-rent per worker and rent-sharing rule. Per capita quasi-rent, representing a firm's ability to pay, is defined as the difference between sales revenue and the opportunity cost of mobile factors, divided by the number of employees. Rent-sharing rule, a measure of workers' bargaining power, is defined as the average wage premium divided by the per capita quasi-rent. Empirical results show that the differences in wage premium among Korean bargaining units are much better explained by the differences in quasi-rent than by the differences in bargaining power. Also, comparing the results of 1986 with those of 1988 show that the wage settlement mechanism in 1988 was not quite different from that of 1986, in spite of the drastic change in industrial relation system in 1987. It may simply yield higher opportunity wages, by raising the bargaining power of overall workers. The tendency of Korean labor market in 1988 to show a dual structure of high & low wage premium sectors, is not due to the fact that the differences in bargaing powers across firms tend to expand, but to the fact that unions tend to reduce the wage differences among the workers within an enterprise by pursuing more equal distribution of total wage premium. Hence, the policies for reducing the wage differentials across firms should focus on rent-regulating industrial policies, e.g. eliminating monopoly rents by deregulation.

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Income Distribution and Determinants of Self-Employment: Quantile Regression Analysis (자영업 부문의 소득분포 및 소득결정요인: 분위회귀분석)

  • Choi, Kang-Shik;Jeong, Jin-Ook;Jung, Jin-Hwa
    • Journal of Labour Economics
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.135-156
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    • 2005
  • This paper analyzes the distribution and determinants of income of the self-employed, in comparison with salaried workers. Relative to salaried workers, in general, the self-employed tend to have a larger dispersion of income and larger heterogeneity. In this regard, the quantile regression analysis was used, along with a typical OLS regression analysis. According to the empirical findings, the income of the self-employed is larger than that of salaried workers, and this difference is larger for higher income group. The marginal effect of education is larger for higher income groups for both the self-employed and salaried workers, implying the return on education is larger for higher income groups. In contrast, for self-employed women, the marginal effect of education is smaller for higher income groups. Put differently, the return on education in the labor market is larger for salaried workers and self-employed men of high income groups as compared to those of low income groups, whereas the opposite holds for self-employed women.

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Analysis of Determinants of Employment Quality of Youth in Seoul: Focused on Population Movement, Labor Market Trends, Job Duration and Wages (서울시 청년층의 고용의 질 결정요인 분석: 인구이동, 노동시장 동향, 일자리 지속기간 및 임금을 중심으로)

  • Hwang, Kwanghoon
    • Land and Housing Review
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.39-54
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    • 2022
  • Using the 1st to 13th rounds of occupational history data of the Korea Employment Information Service's Youth Panel (YP2007), this study explores the trends and characteristics of the youth labor market in Seoul. We further empirically investigated the job duration and wage determinants of youth employed in Seoul. The results confirm that workers who have a higher income and a higher consistency with their majors are less likely to leave. In addition, we find that workers in full-time, householders, or labor unions have a higher income if they are men and work in large companies. In particular, compared to the reference group (appropriate academic background, appropriate skill), mismatches in the lack of education and skill showed a wage increase effect of 4.9% and 5.5%, respectively. For the major consistency, the wage of the matched major group is 3.8% higher than the non-matched major group.