Cancian M, Reed D
La Follette Institute of Public Affairs, School of Social Work, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
Demography. 1999 May;36(2):173-84.
We estimate the extent to which rising family income inequality can be explained by changes in the earnings of married women. We develop a decomposition equation that separates single persons from married couples (decomposition by population group) and, for married couples, distinguishes the impact of wives' earnings from other sources of income (decomposition by income source). Despite the rising correlation between husbands' and wives' earnings, changes in wives' earnings do not explain a substantial portion of the increase in family income inequality. Our results contradict those of some previous analyses. The inconsistency of recent estimates can be traced to the use of a variety of conceptually different approaches in the previous literature. We clarify these approaches by explicitly distinguishing the conceptual issues, analyzing the empirical components, and providing comprehensive estimates.
我们估计已婚女性收入变化能够解释家庭收入不平等加剧的程度。我们构建了一个分解方程,将单身人士与已婚夫妇区分开来(按人口群体分解),对于已婚夫妇,区分妻子收入与其他收入来源的影响(按收入来源分解)。尽管丈夫和妻子的收入之间的相关性在上升,但妻子收入的变化并不能解释家庭收入不平等加剧的很大一部分。我们的结果与之前一些分析的结果相矛盾。近期估计结果的不一致可以追溯到先前文献中使用的各种概念上不同的方法。我们通过明确区分概念问题、分析实证成分并提供全面估计来阐明这些方法。