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Skip module menu and go to content.menu index Update on Analytical Studies Research Online catalogue Low income and inequality Earnings, income and wealth Employment, unemployment and working time Education and training Immigration Labour turnover Workplace studies Demographic groups Institutional factors Spatial analyses Trends and conditions in CMAs Data development Other More information Analytical studies branch research paper series

The Evolution of the Gender Earnings Gap Amongst Canadian University Graduates

by Ross Finnie and Ted Wannell
Business and Labour Market Analysis Division
Analytical Studies Branch research paper series, No. 235

Context

While we know a good deal about the gender earnings gap in Canada (as elsewhere) and how it varies across workers of different ages (and types), we know much less regarding precisely how the gap evolves over the life cycle for given cohorts of workers or how these dynamics have been shifting over time.

Objectives

The contribution of this paper is to report the findings of an empirical analysis of the gender earnings gap amongst Canadian Bachelor's level university graduates over the first five years following graduation and to compare these dynamics for three separate cohorts of recent graduates.

The work is based on three waves of the recently available National Graduates Surveys (NGS) databases, which comprise individuals who successfully completed their programmes at Canadian universities in 1982, 1986, and 1990, with the data gathered during interviews conducted two and five years after graduation for each group of graduates.

Findings

There was a substantial narrowing of the overall gender earnings gap across cohorts—the result of increases in female graduates' earnings and decreases in males' earnings—but the narrowing was much greater two years following graduation than five years out, as men's earnings grew considerably more strongly than women's over this interval, even for the later groups of graduates.

A large part of the gender earnings gap at each interview date, and much of the increase in the overall earnings gap from two to five years following graduation, appears to have been of a generalised nature, unrelated to specific job characteristics, experience profiles, or individual attributes. At the same time, much of the narrowing of the gap across cohorts has been of a similarly general nature.

There was an increase in the relative and absolute importance of the explained portion of the gender gap over time for a given cohort, and a pronounced decrease in the unexplained differences (Beta effects) in each later cohort, being zero or near-zero for the latest group of graduates, thus indicating gender neutrality (or near to it) in the returns to various factors in the labour market.

As for more specific influences, hours of work was an important determinant of the earnings gap at each point in time, as well as of its increase in the years following graduation.

Other factors, such as past work experience, specific job characteristics, family status, and province of residence and language spoken, have played only smaller and generally more mixed roles in the gender gap amongst these Bachelor's graduates.

Data sources: National Graduates Survey (and Follow-up) (1982, 1986, 1990).

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