The Reverse Gender Wage Gap in Bangladesh: Demystifying the Counterintuitive

    Published online by the Indian Society of Labour Economics (ISLE) and Springer Nature Group in The Indian Journal of Labour Economics (IJLE)

    There is a gender wage gap (men earning more than women) in labour market of most countries, to varying degrees, is widely recognised in relevant literature. In this backdrop, the fndings of the ILO study (ILO 2018), based on an analysis of cross-country data, showing Bangladesh as an outlier in this regard, calls for an explanation and indepth investigation. Based on Bangladesh labour force data, the ILO report found factor-weighted hourly wage in Bangladesh to be 5.0% more for women compared to that of men. This counter-intuitive presence of reverse gender wage gap is a departure from results derived for all other countries in the sample of 60 countries. The study examines why the ILO results are what they are, what are the reasons that have informed the ILO fndings and whether a diferent (improved) methodology would give other results. The study undertakes a re-estimation of gender wage gap in Bangladesh by changing the specifcations in the ILO study, by deploying human capital, wage discrimination and segmented labour market theories and quantile regression. The study fnds that under full specifcation men are
    found to earn more than women in the Bangladesh labour market, albeit not to a signifcant extent—the wage gap was found to be in the range of between 2.0 and 4.0%. While the study does not fnd strong embedded discrimination against women, it does fnd sectoral segmentation, and presence of glass ceiling in the Bangladesh labour market.

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    Author: Mustafizur Rahman, Md Al-Hasan
    Publication period: November 2022