Binder Ariel J, Lam David
Economist within the U.S. Census Bureau's Center for Economic Studies. This paper was completed while he was a PhD candidate in the Department of Economics and Pre-Doctoral trainee in the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan.
Professor in the Department of Economics; Research Professor in the Population Studies Center; and Director of the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan. He is also a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
J Hum Resour. 2022 Nov;57(6):1885-1914. doi: 10.3368/jhr.58.2.0320-10803r1. Epub 2020 Sep 11.
This paper argues that distributions of spousal earnings gaps provide no identifying information for the male breadwinner norm, nor such a norm's consequences for gender inequality. First, we show that simple marital matching models-without norm-related assumptions-closely replicate U.S. distributions of wife-husband earnings gaps. Second, we show that the discontinuity in this distribution as wives start to out-earn husbands reflects not breadwinner norms, but rather a point mass of equal-earning couples. We conclude by arguing that the point mass may also threaten other tests of the male breadwinner hypothesis, and proposing several robustness checks that future research should utilize.
本文认为,配偶收入差距的分布并未为男主外女主内的规范提供识别信息,也未提供该规范对性别不平等影响的相关信息。首先,我们表明,简单的婚姻匹配模型(无需与规范相关的假设)就能紧密复制美国夫妻收入差距的分布情况。其次,我们表明,随着妻子收入开始超过丈夫,这种分布的不连续性并非反映男主外女主内的规范,而是反映了收入平等夫妻的一个点质量。我们在结论中指出,这个点质量也可能对男主外女主内假设的其他检验构成威胁,并提出了未来研究应采用的几种稳健性检验方法。