Maria Stanfors
Professor
Risk Preferences and Gender Differences in Union Membership in Late Nineteenth-Century Swedish Manufacturing
Författare
Summary, in English
Women are generally seen as less inclined to join trade unions. This study matches firm–worker data from the Swedish cigar and printing industries around 1900 and examines information on men and women holding the same jobs; such data are rare but important for understanding gender gaps. The results explain the gender gap in union membership among compositors, but not among cigar workers. Differences in union membership varied considerably across firms, with the largest differences found in low-union-density cigar firms where indirect costs (that is, uncertainty and risk) accrued in particular to women workers. The lack of gender differences in mutual aid membership indicates that women were not hard to organize but avoided organizations associated with greater risk for employer retaliation and uncertain returns according to a cost–benefit analysis.
Avdelning/ar
- Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen
Publiceringsår
2018-01-03
Språk
Engelska
Sidor
114-141
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Feminist Economics
Volym
24
Issue
1
Dokumenttyp
Artikel i tidskrift
Förlag
Routledge
Ämne
- Economic History
- Gender Studies
Nyckelord
- gender
- union membership
- manufacturing industry
- firm-level data
- working conditions
- workers’ rights
- J16
- J51
- J83
Aktiv
Published
Projekt
- Manufacturing gender inequality
- The Emergence of Wage Discrimination: Gender wage differentials before the modern labor market (VR)
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISSN: 1354-5701