Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka

The authors examine wage inequalities in Sri Lanka's formal sector using data from the Sri Lanka Integrated Survey 1999-2000. The study aims to: a) investigate whether the labor market is characterized by wage disparities among ethnic and gender groups; b) identify the determinants of wages and the factors that affect the wage differential; c) analyze the determinants of wages across the conditional wage distribution; and d) disaggregate the ethnic or gender wage disparities where observed into a component affected by the endowment of productive characteristics, as well as a component affected by the returns to those productive characteristics in the labor market. The authors find that ethnicity is not a significant determinant of wages. The result is robust to different specifications. In addition, ethnicity is not significant in any of the emotional quantiles estimated. However, there is gender disparity in wage rates in Sri Lanka. The magnitude of this disparity varies depending on the worker's ethnicity. This gender wage disparity varies by about 10 percent for Tamils and 48 percent among other ethnicities. In addition, the authors find that much of the gender disparity is not explained by productive characteristics, implying that discrimination against women may play a role. The quantile regression estimates indicate that the premium paid to male workers in the labor force is more pronounced in the upper conditional wage rate distribution.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan, Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2002-06-30
Subjects:WAGE DIFFERENTIATION, ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION, GENDER DISCRIMINATION, WAGE RATES, LABOR MARKETS, GENDER INEQUALITY, WOMEN WAGES, ETHNICITY ALS, ATTENTION, CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA, CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY, DISCRIMINATION, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMISTS, EMPLOYMENT, ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, EQUILIBRIUM, ETHNIC GROUPS, ETHNIC MINORITIES, FLU, FORESTRY, GENDER, GENDER DIFFERENCES, INCOME, INCOME INEQUALITY, INSURANCE, LABOR FORCE, LEGISLATION, MANAGERS, MARKET FACTORS, MEDIA, PLAYING, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCTIVITY, PUBLIC SECTOR, SERVICE INDUSTRIES, TRANSPORT, UNEMPLOYMENT, WAGE DIFFERENTIALS, WAGES, WORK EXPERIENCE, WORKERS, WORKPLACE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/06/1943368/ethnic-gender-wage-disparities-sri-lanka
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14265
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spelling dig-okr-10986142652024-08-08T17:53:24Z Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan WAGE DIFFERENTIATION ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION GENDER DISCRIMINATION WAGE RATES LABOR MARKETS GENDER INEQUALITY WOMEN WAGES ETHNICITY ALS ATTENTION CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY DISCRIMINATION ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMISTS EMPLOYMENT ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES EQUILIBRIUM ETHNIC GROUPS ETHNIC MINORITIES FLU FORESTRY GENDER GENDER DIFFERENCES INCOME INCOME INEQUALITY INSURANCE LABOR FORCE LABOR MARKETS LEGISLATION MANAGERS MARKET FACTORS MEDIA PLAYING PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC SECTOR SERVICE INDUSTRIES TRANSPORT UNEMPLOYMENT WAGE DIFFERENTIALS WAGE RATES WAGES WORK EXPERIENCE WORKERS WORKPLACE The authors examine wage inequalities in Sri Lanka's formal sector using data from the Sri Lanka Integrated Survey 1999-2000. The study aims to: a) investigate whether the labor market is characterized by wage disparities among ethnic and gender groups; b) identify the determinants of wages and the factors that affect the wage differential; c) analyze the determinants of wages across the conditional wage distribution; and d) disaggregate the ethnic or gender wage disparities where observed into a component affected by the endowment of productive characteristics, as well as a component affected by the returns to those productive characteristics in the labor market. The authors find that ethnicity is not a significant determinant of wages. The result is robust to different specifications. In addition, ethnicity is not significant in any of the emotional quantiles estimated. However, there is gender disparity in wage rates in Sri Lanka. The magnitude of this disparity varies depending on the worker's ethnicity. This gender wage disparity varies by about 10 percent for Tamils and 48 percent among other ethnicities. In addition, the authors find that much of the gender disparity is not explained by productive characteristics, implying that discrimination against women may play a role. The quantile regression estimates indicate that the premium paid to male workers in the labor force is more pronounced in the upper conditional wage rate distribution. 2013-06-27T20:07:11Z 2013-06-27T20:07:11Z 2002-06-30 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/06/1943368/ethnic-gender-wage-disparities-sri-lanka https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14265 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No.2859 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, D.C.
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic WAGE DIFFERENTIATION
ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
WAGE RATES
LABOR MARKETS
GENDER INEQUALITY
WOMEN WAGES
ETHNICITY ALS
ATTENTION
CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMISTS
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
EQUILIBRIUM
ETHNIC GROUPS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
FLU
FORESTRY
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
INCOME
INCOME INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
MANAGERS
MARKET FACTORS
MEDIA
PLAYING
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SECTOR
SERVICE INDUSTRIES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
WAGE RATES
WAGES
WORK EXPERIENCE
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
WAGE DIFFERENTIATION
ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
WAGE RATES
LABOR MARKETS
GENDER INEQUALITY
WOMEN WAGES
ETHNICITY ALS
ATTENTION
CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMISTS
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
EQUILIBRIUM
ETHNIC GROUPS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
FLU
FORESTRY
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
INCOME
INCOME INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
MANAGERS
MARKET FACTORS
MEDIA
PLAYING
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SECTOR
SERVICE INDUSTRIES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
WAGE RATES
WAGES
WORK EXPERIENCE
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
spellingShingle WAGE DIFFERENTIATION
ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
WAGE RATES
LABOR MARKETS
GENDER INEQUALITY
WOMEN WAGES
ETHNICITY ALS
ATTENTION
CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMISTS
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
EQUILIBRIUM
ETHNIC GROUPS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
FLU
FORESTRY
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
INCOME
INCOME INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
MANAGERS
MARKET FACTORS
MEDIA
PLAYING
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SECTOR
SERVICE INDUSTRIES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
WAGE RATES
WAGES
WORK EXPERIENCE
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
WAGE DIFFERENTIATION
ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
WAGE RATES
LABOR MARKETS
GENDER INEQUALITY
WOMEN WAGES
ETHNICITY ALS
ATTENTION
CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMISTS
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
EQUILIBRIUM
ETHNIC GROUPS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
FLU
FORESTRY
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
INCOME
INCOME INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
MANAGERS
MARKET FACTORS
MEDIA
PLAYING
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SECTOR
SERVICE INDUSTRIES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
WAGE RATES
WAGES
WORK EXPERIENCE
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep
Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
description The authors examine wage inequalities in Sri Lanka's formal sector using data from the Sri Lanka Integrated Survey 1999-2000. The study aims to: a) investigate whether the labor market is characterized by wage disparities among ethnic and gender groups; b) identify the determinants of wages and the factors that affect the wage differential; c) analyze the determinants of wages across the conditional wage distribution; and d) disaggregate the ethnic or gender wage disparities where observed into a component affected by the endowment of productive characteristics, as well as a component affected by the returns to those productive characteristics in the labor market. The authors find that ethnicity is not a significant determinant of wages. The result is robust to different specifications. In addition, ethnicity is not significant in any of the emotional quantiles estimated. However, there is gender disparity in wage rates in Sri Lanka. The magnitude of this disparity varies depending on the worker's ethnicity. This gender wage disparity varies by about 10 percent for Tamils and 48 percent among other ethnicities. In addition, the authors find that much of the gender disparity is not explained by productive characteristics, implying that discrimination against women may play a role. The quantile regression estimates indicate that the premium paid to male workers in the labor force is more pronounced in the upper conditional wage rate distribution.
topic_facet WAGE DIFFERENTIATION
ETHNIC DISCRIMINATION
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
WAGE RATES
LABOR MARKETS
GENDER INEQUALITY
WOMEN WAGES
ETHNICITY ALS
ATTENTION
CENTRAL BANK OF SRI LANKA
CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMISTS
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES
EQUILIBRIUM
ETHNIC GROUPS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
FLU
FORESTRY
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
INCOME
INCOME INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
LABOR FORCE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGISLATION
MANAGERS
MARKET FACTORS
MEDIA
PLAYING
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC SECTOR
SERVICE INDUSTRIES
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
WAGE DIFFERENTIALS
WAGE RATES
WAGES
WORK EXPERIENCE
WORKERS
WORKPLACE
author Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep
Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
author_facet Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
Kurukulasuriya, Pradeep
Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
author_sort Ajwad, Mohamed Ihsan
title Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
title_short Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
title_full Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Ethnic and Gender Wage Disparities in Sri Lanka
title_sort ethnic and gender wage disparities in sri lanka
publisher World Bank, Washington, D.C.
publishDate 2002-06-30
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/06/1943368/ethnic-gender-wage-disparities-sri-lanka
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14265
work_keys_str_mv AT ajwadmohamedihsan ethnicandgenderwagedisparitiesinsrilanka
AT kurukulasuriyapradeep ethnicandgenderwagedisparitiesinsrilanka
AT ajwadmohamedihsan ethnicandgenderwagedisparitiesinsrilanka
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