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Measuring occupational sex segregation

Measuring occupational sex segregation. Stephanie Steinmetz (UvA) InGRID expert workshop 11 February 2014. What is occupational sex segregation and why is it important?. Women & men work in different types of occupations and at different occupational levels !.

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Measuring occupational sex segregation

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  1. Measuring occupational sex segregation Stephanie Steinmetz (UvA) InGRID expert workshop 11 February 2014

  2. What is occupational sex segregation and why is it important?

  3. Women & men work in different types of occupations and at different occupational levels !

  4. Why is this of interest? Last decades an increasing participation of women • in education + on the labour market But,women still predominantly choose • typical female fields of study + typical female occupations And they are still underrepresented in high status positions  Persistent & universal phenomen in most industrialised societies  Leads to gender inequalities with respect to income, power etc.

  5. Policy level – Equality measure • Degree/level of occupational sex segregation provides information on • how unequal the distribution of men and women across occupations and positions is, • how men and women are integrated in the workplace, and • how separated they are by the work they do. • Used as an ‘gender equality measure’… … for designing, evaluating & monitoring employment+social programmes as well as policies!

  6. Occupational gender typing(ESS 2012, ISCO08-1)

  7. Occupational concentration (ESS, 2012 / ISCO-3) ~25% of employed women concentrated in five occupations

  8. Measuring occupational sex segregation

  9. Common indices • D = Index of Dissimilarity(Duncan & Duncan 1955) • Sex segregation = different distribution of women and men across occupations • D=0 (complete equality) and 1 (complete dissimilarity) • Proportion of women & men who would need to change jobs in order to remove segregation

  10. Alternative measures • Dst= Standardized Index of Dissimilarity (Gibbs 1965)  not affectedby occupational size effects  should therefore measure ‘pure’ sex typing • IP index (Karmel & MacLachlan, 1988) reflects relative size of both sexes + accounts for male & female share of all employed persons  should not be sensitive to variations in female labor force share • Marginal Matching Index (MM)/Index of Segregation (IS) (Blackburn 1993)  measures changes over time resulting exclusively from changes in sex composition of occupations • Association Index (Charles & Grusky, 2004)  based on log-linear models • WE index (OECD, 1980) • SR= Sex-Ratio Index (Hakim, 1979)

  11. Used for change over time - 1992-2007 Source: Bettio & Verashchagina, European Commission, 2009 11

  12. Role of definitions & classifications • Underestimation of the crucial role of definitions and classifications in data production. • Determine • what is to be covered or not and with how much detail a variable will be described. • the quality of resulting figures. • how well they reflect the actual situation of the different participants in the labor market.

  13. Determinants of segregation indices • ‘Gender blindness’ of occupational classifications  Aggregated occupational groups masks sex segregation Classifications do not adequately capture important labour market changes • Occupational classifications Inconsistency • Concept of ‘occupation’  Country-specific occupational classifications might follow different construction principles

  14. Occupational classifications ‘Gender blindness’ • Classifications cover labour market developments with some delay • Important changes (e.g. service sector expansion) are not captured adequately (female-dominated sector) • Many new occupations evolve which are allocated to few & heterogeneous occupational groups. • Level of detail matters!

  15. Occupational detail • Advantage of using disaggregated occupational data  broad occupational groups hide occupational sex segregation  impacts on the calculation of segregation indices (value of D declines with more aggregation  it appears that there is less segregation than there really is)  more detailed occupations reveal a more accurate picture of the actual work experience of men & women  only then can gender distinction be revealed

  16. Which occupations are gendered? • Example: Major group 3 – professionals  ‘integrated’ • But: 4-digit level! Source: ESS 2012

  17. Change of the Index of Dissimilarity 17

  18. BUT… • …unfortunately, even very detailed occupational groups may hide occupations’ sex segregation! WHY? • Tasks & duties of the same occupation may vary between men and women. • Example: cleaning occupations (Messing, 1998) &sales occupations (Dixon-Muller, Anker 1990) • Female occupations tend to be considered too ‘general’,  multitude of tasks linked to general skills (literacy, numeracy & interpersonal contacts & traditional housekeeping activities)

  19. Occupational classifications Problem: Changingfrom 1-digit to more disaggregated2-/3-digit levelsomeoccupations in group 7 obviouslyrequirehigherdegrees of skill & longer training thansome of theoccupationsclassified in group 5. • Problem of inconsistency ISCO-08

  20. Concept / Measurement of ‘occupation’ • Different national & cultural contexts might create country-specific occupational classifications following different construction /measurement principles  are transferred into ISCO08 classification  how ‘genderblind’ are these different measures?

  21. Conclusion • Occupational classifications should describe men & women’s work characteristics equally well and detailed. • Provision of additional ‘gender relevant’ (job) information (i.e. tasks and duties, skills etc.) providing insights into how sex segregation works within occupations. • Use of aggregated indices as a measure of equality to evaluate progress should be limited!

  22. THANK YOU! • Questions? Comments? Contact: s.m.steinmetz@uva.nl

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