Dwyer Rachel E, Hodson Randy, McLoud Laura
Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Gend Soc. 2013 Feb 1;27(1):30-55. doi: 10.1177/0891243212464906.
For many young Americans, access to credit has become critical to completing a college education and embarking on a successful career path. Young people increasingly face the trade-off of taking on debt to complete college or foregoing college and taking their chances in the labor market without a college degree. These trade-offs are gendered by differences in college preparation and support and by the different labor market opportunities women and men face that affect the value of a college degree and future difficulties they may face in repaying college debt. We examine these new realities by studying gender differences in the role of debt in the pivotal event of graduating from college using the 1997 cohort of the national longitudinal Survey of youth. In this article, we find that women and men both experience slowing and even diminishing probabilities of graduating when carrying high levels of debt, but that men drop out at lower levels of debt than do women. We conclude by theorizing that high levels of debt are one of the mechanisms that sort women and men into different positions in the social stratification system.
对于许多美国年轻人来说,获得信贷对于完成大学教育并踏上成功的职业道路至关重要。年轻人越来越多地面临着这样的权衡:是背负债务完成大学学业,还是放弃大学教育,凭借没有大学学位的条件在劳动力市场上碰碰运气。这些权衡因大学准备和支持方面的性别差异,以及男女所面临的不同劳动力市场机会而呈现出性别特征,这些机会会影响大学学位的价值以及他们未来偿还大学债务时可能面临的困难。我们通过利用1997年全国青年纵向调查队列研究大学毕业这一关键事件中债务作用的性别差异,来审视这些新现实。在本文中,我们发现,背负高额债务时,男性和女性毕业的概率都会放缓甚至下降,但男性在债务水平较低时就会辍学,而女性则不会。我们通过理论分析得出结论,高额债务是将男性和女性在社会分层系统中归入不同位置的机制之一。