2001
DOI: 10.1080/13545700010028374
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Sex Differentials in Earnings in the South Korean Labor Market

Abstract: We examine gender differences in earnings among South Korean workers in 1988 - the year the South Korean National Assembly enacted the Equal Employment Opportunity Act. Using the "88 Occupational Wage Bargaining Survey on the Actual Condition," we calculate women's mean earnings as a percentage of men's mean earnings by major industrial category and educational attainment. We find a larger wage gap among clerical and sales workers than production workers or professionals. Generally, the more education a woman … Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(21 reference statements)
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“…It might be the case that, on one hand, household heads who did not go to college and started their career at a younger age may be more independent from their parental generation and extended families, and potentially are less beholden to the conventional attitudes toward marriage. On the other hand, given the strong tendency of educational homogamy in Korea, the wives in less-than-high-school households are also likely to fare poorly in the labor market, and hence expect a low gain from divorce (Monk-Turner & Turner, 2001;Smits, Utlee, & Lammers, 1998;Tsuya & Bumpass, 2004).…”
Section: Other Findingsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It might be the case that, on one hand, household heads who did not go to college and started their career at a younger age may be more independent from their parental generation and extended families, and potentially are less beholden to the conventional attitudes toward marriage. On the other hand, given the strong tendency of educational homogamy in Korea, the wives in less-than-high-school households are also likely to fare poorly in the labor market, and hence expect a low gain from divorce (Monk-Turner & Turner, 2001;Smits, Utlee, & Lammers, 1998;Tsuya & Bumpass, 2004).…”
Section: Other Findingsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…22 However, men earned more than women by 33.6%–46.9% with comparable skills, suggesting a gender discrimination in wages. 23 These changes can lead to increased heavy drinking habits in Korean women. 24 To address the high rate of harmful alcohol use in Korea, recent trends and associated factors of harmful alcohol use in the high-risk population should be identified.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What might hegemonic masculinity look like in a South Korean context? Over the years, South Korea has been well documented by scholars for its uniquely patriarchal and masculinist pathway to postcolonial/postwar industrialization (R. Kim 1994; E. H. Kim and Choi 1998;Monk-Turner and Turner 2001;Moon 2005a;Na, Han, and Koo 2014). In their seminal volume, Dangerous Women, E. H. Kim and Choi (1998) detail the manner in which the Korean peninsula's encounters with colonialism and military occupation have shaped the South Korean state's distinctly androcentric approach to both gender relations and nation building.…”
Section: The Masculinities Of Korean American Male Returnees In Transmentioning
confidence: 99%