RECONSIDERING THE DECLINING SIGNIFICANCE OF RACE - RACIAL-DIFFERENCESIN EARLY CAREER WAGES

Citation
As. Cancio et al., RECONSIDERING THE DECLINING SIGNIFICANCE OF RACE - RACIAL-DIFFERENCESIN EARLY CAREER WAGES, American sociological review, 61(4), 1996, pp. 541-556
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology
ISSN journal
00031224
Volume
61
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
541 - 556
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-1224(1996)61:4<541:RTDSOR>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Over a decade ago, Wilson (1980) argued that race was declining in sig nificance as a determinant of economic rewards. In response to his cri tics, he asserted that young Blacks in the 1970s were closing the earn ings gap with their White counterparts; he gave no indication that he thought the trend toward racial parity in earnings would reverse. We t ested Wilson's assertion by comparing the net effect of race on hourly wages for two cohorts of young workers. We also decomposed the racial gap in hourly wages into a discrimination component and a nondiscrimi nation component. Our samples were taken from the Panel Study of lncom e Dynamics in 1976 and 1985. Contrary to Wilson's proposition, we show that: (1) The effect of race, net of controls, increased during this time, and (2) the proportion of the racial gap in hourly wages due to discrimination (i.e., not explained by racial differences in measured qualifications) increased between 1976 and 1985. We contend that the g overnment's retreat from anti-discrimination initiatives in the 1980s resulted in organizational discrimination against Blacks and contribut ed to a reversal in the postwar trend toward racial parity in earnings .