Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession

Using the recent Wage Structure Survey 2010, this article examines the public-private sector wage gaps in Spain along the whole earnings distribution and the incidence of the gender gap in both sectors of the economy. Firstly, we find that that there is positive wage premium to public sector employment that is not fully explained by employees' observable characteristics. Furthermore, this premium concentrates on low-skilled workers, while high-skilled individuals in the public sector suffer a pay penalty. Secondly, the gender gap is substantially larger in the private sector. Lastly, we analyse what happens in some specific activities, Education and Human health and social work, where both public and private sector coexist to a large extent. We discuss several explanations for these findings, which are coherent with the available international evidence, and the possible implications of the current process of downsizing of public sector employment associated with austerity measures.

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Main Authors: Antón,José-Ignacio, Muñoz de Bustillo,Rafael
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Economía 2015
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0185-16672015000200009
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spelling oai:scielo:S0185-166720150002000092015-11-06Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great RecessionAntón,José-IgnacioMuñoz de Bustillo,Rafael wage gap public sector gender gap quantile regression Using the recent Wage Structure Survey 2010, this article examines the public-private sector wage gaps in Spain along the whole earnings distribution and the incidence of the gender gap in both sectors of the economy. Firstly, we find that that there is positive wage premium to public sector employment that is not fully explained by employees' observable characteristics. Furthermore, this premium concentrates on low-skilled workers, while high-skilled individuals in the public sector suffer a pay penalty. Secondly, the gender gap is substantially larger in the private sector. Lastly, we analyse what happens in some specific activities, Education and Human health and social work, where both public and private sector coexist to a large extent. We discuss several explanations for these findings, which are coherent with the available international evidence, and the possible implications of the current process of downsizing of public sector employment associated with austerity measures.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessUniversidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de EconomíaInvestigación económica v.74 n.292 20152015-06-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0185-16672015000200009en
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country México
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libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Antón,José-Ignacio
Muñoz de Bustillo,Rafael
spellingShingle Antón,José-Ignacio
Muñoz de Bustillo,Rafael
Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
author_facet Antón,José-Ignacio
Muñoz de Bustillo,Rafael
author_sort Antón,José-Ignacio
title Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
title_short Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
title_full Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
title_fullStr Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
title_full_unstemmed Public-private sector wage differentials in Spain: An updated picture in the midst of the Great Recession
title_sort public-private sector wage differentials in spain: an updated picture in the midst of the great recession
description Using the recent Wage Structure Survey 2010, this article examines the public-private sector wage gaps in Spain along the whole earnings distribution and the incidence of the gender gap in both sectors of the economy. Firstly, we find that that there is positive wage premium to public sector employment that is not fully explained by employees' observable characteristics. Furthermore, this premium concentrates on low-skilled workers, while high-skilled individuals in the public sector suffer a pay penalty. Secondly, the gender gap is substantially larger in the private sector. Lastly, we analyse what happens in some specific activities, Education and Human health and social work, where both public and private sector coexist to a large extent. We discuss several explanations for these findings, which are coherent with the available international evidence, and the possible implications of the current process of downsizing of public sector employment associated with austerity measures.
publisher Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Economía
publishDate 2015
url http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0185-16672015000200009
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