TY - UNPB
T1 - Women in the Workplace and Management Practices
T2 - Theory and Evidence
AU - Kato, Takao
AU - Kodama, Naomi
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - We review recent studies on management practices and their consequences for women in the workplace. First, the High Performance Work System (HPWS) is associated with greater gender diversity in the workplace while there is little evidence that the HPWS reduces the gender pay gap. Second, work-life balance practices with limited face-to-face interactions with coworkers may hamper women’s career advancement. Third, individual incentive linking pay to objective performance may enhance gender diversity while individual incentive with subjective performance may have an opposite effect. Fourth, a rat race model with working hours as a signal of the worker’s commitment is a promising way to explain the gender gap in promotions. Fifth, corporate social responsibility practices may increase gender diversity. We temper the findings by identifying three major methodological challenges: (i) how to measure management practices; (ii) how to account for endogeneity of management practices; and (iii) how to minimize selection bias.
AB - We review recent studies on management practices and their consequences for women in the workplace. First, the High Performance Work System (HPWS) is associated with greater gender diversity in the workplace while there is little evidence that the HPWS reduces the gender pay gap. Second, work-life balance practices with limited face-to-face interactions with coworkers may hamper women’s career advancement. Third, individual incentive linking pay to objective performance may enhance gender diversity while individual incentive with subjective performance may have an opposite effect. Fourth, a rat race model with working hours as a signal of the worker’s commitment is a promising way to explain the gender gap in promotions. Fifth, corporate social responsibility practices may increase gender diversity. We temper the findings by identifying three major methodological challenges: (i) how to measure management practices; (ii) how to account for endogeneity of management practices; and (iii) how to minimize selection bias.
KW - Gender diversity in the labor market
KW - Gender pay gap
KW - Management practices
KW - High performance work system
KW - Work-life balance
KW - Family-friendly practices
KW - Incentive pay
KW - Pay for performance
KW - Promotion tournament
KW - Rat races
KW - Corporate social responsibility
KW - Gender diversity in the labor market
KW - Gender pay gap
KW - Management practices
KW - High performance work system
KW - Work-life balance
KW - Family-friendly practices
KW - Incentive pay
KW - Pay for performance
KW - Promotion tournament
KW - Rat races
KW - Corporate social responsibility
M3 - Working paper
T3 - IZA Discussion Paper
BT - Women in the Workplace and Management Practices
PB - IZA
CY - Bonn
ER -