The Role of Pre-Market Factors in Black-White Wage Differences

Many attempts to measure the wage effects of current labor market discrimination against minorities include controls for worker productivity that (1) could themselves be affected by market discrimination and (2) are very imprecise measures of worker skill. The resulting estimates of residual wage gaps may be biased. Our approach is a parsimoniously specified wage equation which controls for skill with the score of a test administered as teenagers prepared to leave high school and embark on work careers or post-secondary education. Independent evidence shows that this test score is a racially unbiased measure of the skills and abilities these teenagers were about to bring to the labor market. We find that this one test score explains all of the black-white wage gap for young women and much of the gap for young men. For today's young adults, the black-white wage gap primarily reflects a skill gap, which in turn can be traced, at least in part, to observable differences in the family backgrounds and school environments of black and white children. While our results do provide some evidence of current labor market discrimination, skill gaps play such a large role that we believe future research should focus on the obstacles black children face in acquiring productive skills.

[1]  Jeffrey Grogger,et al.  Does School Quality Explain the Recent Black/White Wage Trend? , 1996, Journal of Labor Economics.

[2]  David A. Jaeger,et al.  Problems with Instrumental Variables Estimation when the Correlation between the Instruments and the Endogenous Explanatory Variable is Weak , 1995 .

[3]  R. Murnane,et al.  The Growing Importance of Cognitive Skills in Wage Determination , 1995 .

[4]  Ronald L. Oaxaca,et al.  On discrimination and the decomposition of wage differentials , 1994 .

[5]  Nan L. Maxwell,et al.  The Effect on Black-White Wage Differences of Differences in the Quantity and Quality of Education , 1994 .

[6]  James P. Smith Affirmative Action and the Racial Wage Gap , 1993 .

[7]  J. Heckman,et al.  Continuous Versus Episodic Change: The Impact of Civil Rights Policy on the Economic Status of Blacks , 1991 .

[8]  Stephen J. Ceci,et al.  How Much Does Schooling Influence General Intelligence and Its Cognitive Components? A Reassessment of the Evidence. , 1991 .

[9]  R. Freeman,et al.  What Went Wrong? The Erosion of Relative Earnings and Employment Among Young Black Men in the 1980s , 1991 .

[10]  Francine D. Blau,et al.  Black-White Earnings Over the 1970s and 1980s: Gender Differences in Trends , 1991 .

[11]  David Card,et al.  School Quality and Black-White Relative Earnings: A Direct Assessment , 1991 .

[12]  Kevin M. Murphy,et al.  Accounting for the Slowdown in Black-White Wage Convergence , 1991 .

[13]  J. Angrist,et al.  Does Compulsory School Attendance Affect Schooling and Earnings? , 1990 .

[14]  June O'Neill,et al.  The Role of Human Capital in Earnings Differences between Black and White Men , 1990 .

[15]  J. Bishop Achievement, Test Scores and Relative Wages , 1989 .

[16]  C. Reimers,et al.  Labor Market Discrimination against Hispanic and Black Men , 1983 .

[17]  Richard Startz,et al.  Private Discrimination and Social Intervention in Competitive Labor Markets , 1983 .

[18]  Charles C. Brown Black-White Earnings Ratios Since the Civil Rights Act of 1964: The Importance of Labor Market Dropouts , 1984 .

[19]  Greg J. Duncan,et al.  Work History, Labor Force Attachment, and Earnings Differences between the Races and Sexes , 1979 .

[20]  R. Freeman Black Economic Progress after 1964: Who Has Gained and Why? , 1978 .

[21]  J. Heckman,et al.  The Government&Apos;S Impact on the Labor Market Status of Black Americans: A Critical Review , 1977 .

[22]  A. Blinder Wage Discrimination: Reduced Form and Structural Estimates , 1973 .

[23]  K. Arrow The Theory of Discrimination , 1971 .